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Showing posts with label Solid Waste. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Solid Waste. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 25, 2011

10 years after passage of ecological solid waste management law, groups lament lack in its implementation

As the nation commemorates the 10th year anniversary of the signing into law of the Ecological Solid Waste Management Act of 2000 or the Republic Act (RA) 9003, green groups belonging to waste watchdog EcoWaste Coalition expressed utter dismay over the increasingly deplorable garbage situation in the country and the law’s apparent lack of implementation despite its 10 years of existence.


“In commemoration of the signing of RA 9003 on 26 January a decade ago, we earnestly pray that concerned authorities would finally come to serious terms with the mandate of the law and keep the promise of a healthy and sustainable environment that the law is supposed to achieve,” said EcoWaste Coalition President, veteran actor and zero waste activist Roy Alvarez.


“The 10 year old law apparently has not developed into maturity despite its age, considering the garbage and waste crisis the country is in today,” lamented Alvarez.

“What is very depressing is the utter lack of serious implementation of this law, as evidenced by the wanton violations of its major provisions everywhere,” he added.

Citing recent figures from the National Solid Waste Management Commission (NSWMC) website, the Coalition argued that:

· Despite the law’s mandate for the closure of all open dumps by February of 2004, recent data from the NSWMC shows 790 open dumps that remain in operation.

· While all controlled dumps should have been closed by February 2006, the NSWMC data still yield 382 controlled dumps, an increase of 3 from the Commission’s 2009 data.

· There is an apparent slow progress in putting-up materials recovery facilities or MRFs, which number only 6,957 and which serve only 7,938 of the country’s more than 42,000 barangays.

The Coalition also cited as a major concern the unacceptable location of “sanitary” landfills in areas prohibited by law, and notwithstanding objections by the affected communities, such as the San Mateo landfill in Marikina, the Ternate landfill in Mt. Palay-Palay in Cavite, and the VGP landfill in San Jose del Monte.

These, together with other violations such as the continuing disregard of the “residuals only” mandate for sanitary landfills in operation, prompted the EcoWaste Coalition to request the Department of Environment and Natural Resources Secretary, Ramon Paje, Jr., to conduct an investigation of the violations committed by landfill operators and authorities.


Moreover, the zero waste watchdog observed that explicit violations on specific prohibited acts such as littering, open burning, open dumping, construction of dumps in environmentally critical areas, and the manufacture, distribution, use or importation of non-environmentally acceptable products and services, have remained rampant and unchecked or simply ignored by those who are supposed to implement the law.


“Ten years should be enough to teach us vital lessons to learn from and to enable our waste management authorities from the national to the local level to finally let the law have its rightful way,” Alvarez maintained.

Tuesday, January 11, 2011

Gabundok na basura sa pista ng Nazareno naiwan

GABUNDOK na basura ang nakolekta sa Quirino Grandstand at Quiapo Church sa Maynila matapos ang selebrasyon ng pista ng Itim na Nazareno, ayon mismo ito sa environmental group na EcoWaste Coalition.

Ito ang mga basurang iniwan ng mga deboto ng Itim na Nazareno sa kabila ng apela ng grupo bago pa man ang pista na gawing “luntian” ang pagdiriwang.

“We were saddened by the widespread littering that practically turned Quirino Grandstand open field in Luneta into a dumping ground,” sabi ni Manny Calonzo ng Ecowaste Basura Patrol.

“Soon after the Black Nazarene procession left the Quirino Grandstand, we saw the open field littered with mixed biodegradable and non-biodegradable materials that waste pickers collected,” dagdag pa ni Calonzo.

Batay sa nakuhang impormasyon mula sa National Park Development Committee (NPDC), sinabi ng EcoWaste na may 200 hanggang 250 garbage bags ang nakolekta sa Luneta Park pa lamang kabilang na ang Quirino Grandstand.

Nabatid pa mula sa EcoWaste na sa dalawang araw na pagdiriwang sa Plaza Miranda at mga kalye sa Quiapo, naiwan ang tambak na mga basura na binubuo ng plastic bags, plastic bottles, Styrofoam containers, sticks, mga upos ng sigarilyo, balot ng candy at mga pagkain na itinapon lang sa kung saan-saan ng mga deboto.

Batay sa pagtaya ng Manila Department of Public Services (DPS)-Operation Division, umaabot umano sa 72 tonelada ng basura ang ikinalat ng mga deboto sa loob ng dalawang araw na selebrasyon ng pista ng Itim na Nazareno.

Pinapurihan naman ng EcoWaste ang mga pumulot ng kani-kanilang basura, gayundin ang mga vendors na tumulong sa paglilinis upang mapanatili ang kagandahan ng Luneta at Plaza Miranda.

Black Nazarene procession leaves tons of trash

Environmental group EcoWaste Coalition lamented the “trashing of Luneta” during the Feast of the Black Nazarene on Sunday.

Thousands of devotees attended a morning Mass held at Quirino Grandstand, preceding the annual procession of the Black Nazarene image from Rizal Park to Quiapo Church.

But in the wake of the procession, Quirino Grandstand and Rizal Park were left awash with food leftovers and wrappers, used food and beverage containers, plastic bottles and bags, soiled cartons and newspapers, empty cans and even used disposable diapers, EcoWaste Coalition said in a statement.

The group estimated that the scattered discards could easily fill up 200 to 250 garbage bags. Calls made by ecology groups, the Church and the local government since Monday, appealing for devotees to pick up their own trash, were apparently left unheeded.
“Let’s get real. Our prayerful devotion to the Black Nazarene should be complemented with the highest respect for God’s creation and not by dropping litter anywhere,” said EcoWaste Coalition president Roy Alvarez.

The National Parks Development Committee (NPDC) has started to clean up the park.

“We have prepared for it and we have deployed our sweepers, but we reiterate our call to all park-goers to have discipline, especially when disposing of garbage,” said NPDC media information bureau chief Kenneth Montegrande.

The EcoWaste Coalition expressed gratitude to scavengers in the park, who collected recyclable trash as the procession got started.

A scavenger could earn from P300 to P2,000 from the discarded recyclable items, said Manny Calonzo of the EcoWaste Coalition Basura Patrol.

Quoting the scavengers, he said polyethylene (PET) bottles would sell for P22-P32 a kilo; plastic cups, noodle containers and covers, P15 a kilo; plastic cutlery, P15 a kilo; tin cans, P6 a kilo; and carton boxes, P5 a kilo.

EcoWaste Coalition lauds waste pickers at Luneta after Black Nazarene procession

A waste and pollution watchdog yesterday cited the waste pickers for their effort to recycle discards left by Black Nazarene devotees following the overnight vigil and Eucharistic celebration yesterday morning at the Quirino Grandstand in Luneta.

While saddened by the widespread littering that practically turned Luneta’s open field into a dumping ground, the EcoWaste Coalition lauded some 20 waste pickers who patiently reclaimed recyclable items from the garbage that nearly blanketed the area.

“Soon after the Black Nazarene procession left the Quirino Grandstand, we saw the open field littered with mixed biodegradable and non-biodegradable materials that waste pickers foraged through to retrieve recyclables,” Manny Calonzo of the EcoWaste Coalition’s Basura Patrol said.

“We commend the waste pickers for their enterprising perseverance which prevented valuable resources from being wasted,” he added.

Among the discards found scattered all over the field were food leftovers, polystyrene beverage cups and clam shell food containers, plastic bottles, plastic bags, snack wrappers, soiled carton boxes and newspapers, empty sardine cans and even used infant disposable diapers.

“Let’s get real. Our prayerful devotion to the Black Nazarene should be complemented with the highest respect for God’s creation and not by dropping litter anywhere,” commented Roy Alvarez, president of the EcoWaste Coalition, upon learning of the “trashing” of Luneta.

Among the waste pickers that the EcoWaste Coalition’s Basura Patrol spoke to was 24-year-old “Kuya Liit” from Smokey Mountain in Tondo, Manila who led a team of seven persons in retrieving recyclables that would sell for over P2,000.

Another waste picker, Melchor Lumanog, 52, worked with two other persons in collecting used plastic bottles with an expected total value of P300.

Mac-Mac Lopez, 12, from the Baseco Compound, was seen gathering used boxes that would sell for P5 per kilo.

Information given by the waste pickers to the EcoWaste Coalition’s Basura Patrol shows that polyethylene bottles sell from P22 to P32/kilo, plastic cups, noodle containers and covers P15/kilo, plastic cutlery P15/kilo, tin cans P6/kilo and carton boxes P5/kilo.

Citing information supplied by Joe Atentar, a supervisor under the National Park Development Committee, the EcoWaste Coalition reported that some 200 to 250 garbage bags would be collected from phases 1 and 2 of Rizal Park which include the open field.

Atentar also told the EcoWaste Coalition that some 500 garbage bags were collected in his area of jurisdiction (i.e., Rizal Park’s phases 1 and 2) during the Christmas holidays, specifically on Dec. 24, 25, 26, 30 and 31, 2010 and on Jan. 1, 2011.

Aside from thanking the waste pickers, the EcoWaste Coalition also expressed gratitude to the Nazarene Catholic School, Department of Public Services, the NPDC and several concerned vendors for picking up the trash and sweeping the park clean.