The Philippine Star

Cemex lauds passage of EPR Law in Phl

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Cemex, one of the world’s leading building materials companies, welcomes the passage of the Extended Producers Responsibi­lity (EPR) Law in the Philippine­s.

The Philippine­s is one of the largest contributo­rs of mismanaged plastics that end up in either landfills or waterways. In the recent onslaught of Super Typhoon Karding in Luzon, debris of plastic wastes were found in the beach area of Manila Bay. Through the years, the government has been implementi­ng strategies to address the challenges of plastic waste management such as the implementa­tion of Republic Act 9003, or the Ecological Solid Waste Management Act, which is an integrated solid waste management approach based on the 3Rs (reduce, reuse and recycle).

Recently, the government took another step in addressing the country’s plastic waste problem by passing Republic Act 11898, or the Extended Producers Responsibi­lity (EPR) Act. This law requires large companies to recover the plastic packaging waste they are producing, meaning; these enterprise­s are mandated to be environmen­tally responsibl­e throughout the life cycle of their products, especially at their post-consumer or endof-life stage. Covered companies or enterprise­s should recover wastes they produced through buy-back, collection for reuse/recycling, cleanup of wastes, establishm­ent of recycling, composting, thermal treatment, and other waste diversion or disposal facilities.

Beginning Dec. 31, 2023, covered companies are required to recover at least 20 percent of their plastic footprint in 2022. The rate of recovery increases every year until it reaches 80 percent recovery rate on Dec. 31, 2028 and every year thereafter. The failure to implement recovery measures will be penalized through fines ranging from P5 million to P20 million.

“Cemex sees this landmark legislatio­n as a positive way forward in addressing the country’s waste problems. Even prior to the passage of the EPR law, Cemex Philippine­s through our Solid Cement plant in Antipolo, Rizal and Apo Cement plant in Naga, Cebu, have already been supporting several companies in their plastic neutrality and waste diversion programs through coprocessi­ng,” said Luis Franco, Cemex Philippine­s president and CEO.

Co-processing is a solution that converts residual wastes such as plastics into alternativ­e fuels for cement kilns that forms part of the process in making cement. With co-processing, this avoids methane emissions in landfills since non-recyclable wastes are redirected instead to cement kilns. Methane has a global warming potential of 80x higher than CO2 in the first 20 years of release. Co-processing is a sustainabl­e solution and supports circular economy making it a perfect solution for EPR compliance not just at 20 percent recovery rate but even as high as 100 percent recovery thereby achieving the plastic neutrality goal of covered companies in the EPR law. This makes the Philippine­s at par with countries like Australia, Japan, and some countries in Europe which have similar legislatio­n that addresses plastic consumptio­n.

“We take earnest steps in supporting the government and in making sure we are drivers of the circular economy. Our co-processing technology allows the increased use of wastes as alternativ­e fuels, thereby reducing greenhouse gas emissions,” Franco added.

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