Masses of plastic trash swirling in waterways, garbage clogging drainage canals and huge stinking dumpsites are among the most visible manifestations of the waste crisis in the Philippines.
A 2015 report on plastic pollution by the Ocean Conservancy charity and the McKinsey Centre for Business and Environment ranked the Philippines as the third-largest source of discarded plastic that ends up in the ocean, behind two other Asian nations: China and Indonesia.
The Philippines generates 2.7 million tons of plastic waste annually and 20 percent â or half a million tons â of that leaks into the oceans, the report stated.
According to Froilan Grate, executive director of the Philippines branch of the Global Alliance for Incinerator Alternatives, an absence of garbage collection services in secondary cities and many of the countryâs smaller islands is largely to blame for the overwhelming amount of marine plastic coming from the country.
In 2000, a solution was presented in the form of the Republic Act 9003, or the Ecological Solid Waste Management Act of 2000, but local governments in the Philippines have struggled to implement its directives, Grate said.
The law, considered landmark legislation on environmental management, mandated city and municipal governments to organize and sustainably manage the collection and disposal of solid waste. It also directed the closure of open dump sites and created the National Solid Waste Management Commission to oversee the lawâs implementation.
However, almost 18 years later, there are still more than 900 open dump sites across the country, Grate says.
âMany secondary cities do not have waste collection at all,â he explained, adding that segregation and recycling efforts are scant, regardless of the legislation.
Froilan Grate, executive director of the Philippines branch of the Global Alliance for Incinerator Alternatives.
Von Hernandez is one of the Philippinesâ most influential environmental activists and the global coordinator of the Break Free From Plastic movement. He said despite RA 9003 often being regarded as model legislation for other countries, and that it clearly spells out solutions, implementation has been a challenge because funds earmarked for waste disposal are vulnerable to corruption, and local governments lack the political will.
âRA 9003 mandates recycling, segregating and the closure of dump sitesâŠyet you see so many of them near bodies of water such as Manila Bay and Laguna de Bay [the countryâs largest lake]. It is common sense that these should be shut down â yet there they are,â he said.
He added that there is a need for frontline officials to be consistently educated about the waste management act so they are able to properly implement it.
Hernandez and Grate both insist that there is no reason why the law cannot be implemented in full across the country like it was in the city of San Fernando in the countryâs northern Pampanga province. There, in 2012, a charity called the Mother Earth Foundation worked with schools on waste reduction that resulted in an estimated 70 per cent of the cityâs waste being recycled that would otherwise have ended up in a local dumpsite.
Today, the city is regarded as a model for decentralised waste management and has been labelled one of the best zero-waste models in Asia-Pacific.
As in other developing countries, the explosion in plastic waste in the Philippines began in the 1970s, when consumer-goods companies began selling products in single-use, throwaway packaging.
Hernandez, who has also served as the executive director of Greenpeace Southeast Asia, said a large proportion of plastic waste in the Philippines today is made up of thin plastic-and-aluminium-laminated sachets which are used by multinational companies to sell their products.
Before such sachets were introduced, Filipinos followed âtingiâ culture, Hernandez recalled. Shoppers took their own reusable containers to their neighborhood sari-sari store when they bought small servings of vinegar, soy sauce and other condiments.
The laminated sachets are used for everything ranging from shampoo, toothpaste, creams and soaps to crackers, nuts and other foodstuff.
Although goods in sachets are cheap and convenient in a country where more than a quarter of the population live below the poverty line, they are a huge environmental nuisance.
âSachets have become an industry standard,â Hernandez says. âIt is part of companiesâ strategies to cater to the masses and promote their brands. The consequence of that is pollution.â
A recent brand audit conducted by member organizations of the Break Free From Plastic movement discovered that Unilever, Nestlé, Procter & Gamble and Colgate-Palmolive were among the biggest producers of the plastic waste found in the country. The finding is consistent with that of a week-long beach clean-up carried out on Freedom Island in September 2017.
âSingle-use plastic is ubiquitous, but it lasts forever. Recycling cannot be the answer, so we need to change the system,â said Dianna Cohen, co-founder and CEO of the Plastic Pollution Coalition, one of the organizations that participated in the cleanup.
The Asian Development Bank and the Philippinesâ Department of Environment and Natural Resources jointly project that if sachet use continues on the current scale, the Philippines will need 200 new landfills the size of Metro Manila â itself roughly 600 square kilometers in size â by the year 2020.
Many local governments have passed ordinances to regulate use of plastic that covers items such as shopping bags and secondary packaging materials. Several lawmakers also have filed bills in an attempt to mandate a nationwide prohibition of non-biodegradable straws and stirrers, ban the use of single-use plastic, and regulate the production, import, sale, use and disposal of plastic bags.
Arlen Ancheta, vice-president of internal affairs at the Mother Earth Foundation, does not expect such initiatives to have much effect on waste volumes. He said, however, that they can help inform the public about the gravity of the problem, and hopefully encourage them to change their consumption habits.
Jeremiah Sebastian, of the Pollution Control Association of the Philippines, sees things differently. He said the country will not be ready to phase out plastic use until cost-effective alternatives are available.
âThe problem with banning plastic in general is we tend to see the âevilâ side, focusing on why it was there in the first place. But there is no such thing as eco-friendly packaging â only âfriendlierâ,â he said. âItâs a matter of minimizing the environmental impact of a particular material. Thatâs where life-cycle assessment comes into play.â
He noted, however, that life-cycle assessment is not currently carried out due to underfunding at the National Solid Waste Management Commission, which is tasked by RA 9003 with identifying and phasing out non-environmentally acceptable products and packaging materials.
Charities including Greenpeace, the Global Alliance for Incinerator Alternatives, the Mother Earth Foundation, and the Plastic Pollution Coalition regularly approach the government to discuss citiesâ non-compliance with RA 9003. In the meantime, seeing little or no progress, they also conduct coastal clean-ups with various partners to reduce the amount of marine debris ending up in the ocean.
Grate maintained that waste management is just a small part of the solution, saying: âSan Fernando was able to reduce its waste by 70 percent. But still, residual waste remains. It is that which cannot be managed because of its non-recyclable nature. So the real problem is the companies producing such problematic packaging.â
Hernandez and Grate called on companies to adhere more closely to an âextended producer responsibilityâ strategy â meaning minimizing the impact of their waste on the environment.
âWe have RA 9003; what we donât have is a law that mandates producers to be responsible for the products and packaging that they are bringing to the marketâŠitâs not a consumer problem but a corporate problem,â Hernandez said.
âInstead of relying on [local governments] and the efforts of environmental organisations, these companies, which are making a lot of money from consumers, should invest in their own long-term solutions,â added. (A report from South China Morning Post/PN)
This is so true and we need to act on it NOW!