WWF-Philippines supports the implementation of the Extended Producer Responsibility Law

According to studies by conservation group World Wide Fund for Nature Philippine (WWF-Philippines), each Filipino consumes a yearly average of 20kgs of plastics, and 15.43kgs of it becomes total plastic waste. The country is also suffering from a very low plastic recycling rate of 9% and the studies show that the Philippines leaks about 35% of plastic waste into the environment. 

WWF-Philippines has long been an advocate of the Extended Producers Responsibility (EPR) Law. The EPR scheme is a critical policy tool that holds producers accountable for the full life cycle of their products and packaging. EPR is an environmental policy approach that emerged in the 1990s and is now increasingly recognized globally as a useful tool for accelerating the transition to sustainable waste management and a circular economy. This scheme encourages waste reduction through the elimination of unnecessary packaging of products, the development of more environmentally friendly packaging design, and the recovery of plastic packaging from the trash in order to reuse or recycle them back into the production process.

Continue reading “WWF-Philippines supports the implementation of the Extended Producer Responsibility Law”

Cleene Ethyl Alcohol partners with Plastic Bank in launching “Towards a Cleener Philippines” to reduce ocean plastic waste

More brands are joining efforts to curb ocean-bound plastic waste. One of those is Cleene Ethyl Alcohol, a trusted Filipino brand providing quality and affordable alcohol products made by Philusa Corporation.

Partnering with social enterprise Plastic Bank Corporation, known for building recycling ecosystems in coastal areas through its community of plastic collectors, Cleene Ethyl Alcohol recently launched its campaign entitled “Towards a Cleener Philippines” — a movement encouraging the public to be more mindful of the environment by adopting an eco-friendly lifestyle.

Plastic waste collectors of Plastic Bank

Continue reading “Cleene Ethyl Alcohol partners with Plastic Bank in launching “Towards a Cleener Philippines” to reduce ocean plastic waste”

WWF-Philippines supports the UN Environment Assembly in pushing for a global treaty on plastic pollution

From February 28 to March 4, 2022, the UN Environment Assembly (UNEA) 5.2 will convene. UNEA 5.2 coincides with the 10th anniversary of its creation and the 50th anniversary of the UN Environment Programme.  UN Member States are expected to adopt a decision to start negotiations on a new treaty on plastic pollution. More than three-fourths of the UN membership publicly support the development of a new global agreement along with more than 2.1 million individuals, 25 financial institutions, and more than 60 companies globally.

WWF-Philippines is one with the Philippines and other UN countries’ plan to push for this global treaty.  The Philippines is a co-sponsor of the Peru and Rwanda Resolution which proposes that UNEA establishes an Intergovernmental Negotiating Committee (INC) with a mandate to prepare a new legally binding global agreement that would form part of international law.

Continue reading “WWF-Philippines supports the UN Environment Assembly in pushing for a global treaty on plastic pollution”

WWF-Philippines and Grieg Foundation partner to help reduce plastic waste by 50% in certain Philippine ports

Remember the Titanic? It was the largest ship of its time during the early 1900s, a product of a British passenger line, the White Star Line. The Titanic weighed over 46,000 tons! That is roughly 104.6 million pounds!

Well, here is some trivia from the sea and it is NOT looking good. According to a study conducted by the World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF), in a project funded by Grieg Foundation, a Norwegian foundation, Filipinos consume about 2.15 million tons of plastics in a year (equivalent to 41 Titanics!) from which 9% are recycled and 35% leak into the open environment. Just imagine — 35% of all that plastic ends up as plastic waste in the ocean EVERY YEAR!!! And the major pathway that leads to plastic waste in oceans is through ports where there is a high level of activity and traffic.

Continue reading “WWF-Philippines and Grieg Foundation partner to help reduce plastic waste by 50% in certain Philippine ports”

WWF-Philippines releases its Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) roadmap to address plastic pollution

World Wide Fund for Nature Philippines (WWF-Philippines) recently released an updated report entitled “Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) Scheme Assessment for Plastic Packaging Waste in the Philippines”. In the first edition of this report released in 2020, it was reported that in 2019, the number of plastic items consumed by Filipinos was 2.15 million tons per annum. Thirty-five percent (35%) of the consumed plastics leak into the open environment, while 33% are disposed of in sanitary landfills and open dumpsites, with only 9% recycled because of our lack of capacity to recycle both high and low-value plastics.

Continue reading “WWF-Philippines releases its Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) roadmap to address plastic pollution”

WWF continues the fight against plastic pollution by advocating an Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) scheme in the Philippines

The Philippines is environmentally in danger if we do not do anything. Look at these statistics from a recent report undertaken by the World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF), cyclos GmbH, and AMH Philippines Inc, “Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) Scheme Assessment for Plastic Packaging Waste in the Philippines”.

  • Filipinos consume a yearly average of 20kg of plastics
  • Of this number, 15.43kg/capita/year becomes waste
  • The country has a low plastic recycling rate (9%) due largely to insufficient recycling capacities for high-value recyclables (i.e. PET, PP, HDPE) and the high volume of low-value plastics (including sachets)
  • The Philippines leaks about 35% of its plastic waste into the environment

35% of all our plastics consumption leak into the environment (soil, water)

Continue reading “WWF continues the fight against plastic pollution by advocating an Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) scheme in the Philippines”

Let’s join Earth Hour 2019 and support awareness of the plastic pollution problem

2019 is the 12th year of Earth Hour but it is also the second year of its #Connect2Earth global theme which calls for an urgent need to care for the Earth’s biological diversity. Central to this theme is the continuing focus on the issue of single-use plastics.

What began in 2008 in Manila (Earth Hour first started in Sydney in 2007) as a campaign to create awareness of climate change has evolved into the world’s grassroots movement to raise awareness on the importance of biodiversity as a viable resource link that families, communities, nations, and future generations all depend upon.

(L-R) WWF-Philippines President and CEO Joel Palma, AIS Development Executive of the Boy Scouts of the Philippines Yasser Sarona, WWF-Philippines Climate and Energy Program Head and Earth Hour Pilipinas National Director Atty. Gia Ibay, WWF-Philippines National Ambassador Iza Calzado, WWF-Philippines National Youth Ambassador Janine Gutierrez, and WWF-Philippines National Ambassador Rovilson Fernandez. Photograph courtesy of Alo Lantin / WWF-Philippines

Continue reading “Let’s join Earth Hour 2019 and support awareness of the plastic pollution problem”

Let’s do our share to reduce plastic waste in the Philippines! Say #AyokoNgPlastik!

A 2015 report on plastic pollution done by Ocean Conservancy and McKinsey Center for Business and Environment is said to have ranked the Philippines as the third top plastic polluter in the world. A pilot whale was found dead in Thailand with almost 20 pounds of plastic in its stomach. Just the other day, news broke out that microplastics have been found in human feces. It is no longer surprising. If animals ingest plastics by accident and meat is part of our diet, these microplastics will eventually find its way into our gut.

It also does not help that plastics proliferate, especially here in the Philippines, due to the ‘tingi’ (sachet) concept where products are repackaged into one-time use plastic sachets for convenience, sanitation, and affordability by the less fortunate.

Recently, the World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) Philippines, together with Ayala Malls and other partner corporations, officially launched #AyokoNgPlastik — a movement that hopes to address these alarming facts by bringing together companies, individuals, and other sectors to minimize and eventually eradicate single-use plastics such as straws, bags, bottles, and caps by refusing to use them.

WWF-Philippines National Ambassadors Marc Nelson and Rovilson Fernandez with WWF Next Generation Council member, Stephanie Zubiri-Crespi

Continue reading “Let’s do our share to reduce plastic waste in the Philippines! Say #AyokoNgPlastik!”