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PHILIPPINE SOLID WASTE MANAGEMENT

The Philippines generates about 10,000 million tons of solid waste per year and
only 12 percent of the waste is recycled and re-used. The single most dominant issue for
solid waste management (SWM) is the inadequacy of disposal facilities. Presently, open
dumping is still the most common waste disposal method as controlled dumpsites and
sanitary landfills (SLFs) are very limited.

The opportunities presented by this serious environmental problem to suppliers of


solid waste management products and equipment are enormous. The potential, however,
is tempered by inadequate funds and technical capability, lack of political will and other
problems. Despite the limitations, the market for SWM is still expected to grow five
percent in the next three years.

The major end-users of SWM products and equipment are the local government
units and their private contractors as well as private proponents of SWM projects. The
equipment cost and the source of project funding are major purchase considerations of
end-users.

Overview

Solid waste is an environmental problem that has reached critical proportions in


the Philippines. Due to a growing population, rapidly increasing consumption and
increasing urbanization, waste generated in the Philippines is estimated at 19,700 tons per
day. Projections show that waste generation will increase 47 percent by 2010, or 28,875
tons per day.

SWM is the responsibility of local government units (LGUs), i.e., barangays (the
smallest political unit composed of 50-100 families), municipalities, cities and provincial
governments. There are 41,392 barangays, 1502 municipalities, 116 cities and 71
provinces nationwide.

The barangay is responsible for the segregation of waste at source, collection of


biodegradable and recyclable components and setting up of a materials recovery facility
(MRF). There are about 976 MRFs nationwide. The municipality or city governments are
responsible for the collection and disposal of residual nonbiodegradable and hazardous
waste, except in Metro Manila where disposal is within the mandate of the Metro Manila
Development Authority (MMDA).

Republic Act (RA) No. 9003 (Ecological Solid Waste Management Act of 2000)
was signed into law in January 2000 to address the gargantuan solid waste problem of the
Philippines. It espouses the reuse, recovery and recycling of MSW, with special emphasis
on composting, as opposed to outright disposal. RA 9003 set February 2004 as the
deadline for shifting from open to controlled dumping. By February 2006, the law states
that controlled dumpsites will be deemed closed and phased out. RA 9003 does not
specify what type of disposal facility should be operated when the controlled dumpsites
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are phased out. However, the law contains minimum requirements for designing SLFs as
well as minimum considerations for operating SLFs.

February 2004 has long passed but only about 126 LGUs had implemented the
conversion of open dumps into controlled disposal facilities. There are still about 734
open dumpsites nationwide. In contrast, there are only four SLFs (Clark Ecozone in
Tarlac; Cebu City in the Visayas; Bais, Negros Oriental and Puerto Princesa City,
Palawan) in the country. About 215 sites have been identified as potential SLFs.

At the current rate of implementation, LGUs full compliance with the law is
difficult to achieve. Disregard for solid waste disposal regulations and laws, lack of
political will, huge capital outlay requirements and insufficient funds, lengthy and
bureaucratic processes (permits, environmental clearance certificate, etc.), inadequate
technical capacity, insufficient number or inappropriate collection vehicles, inability to
reach households or collection stations and limited storage at transfer points are among
the problems. In addition, potential disposal sites are difficult to find due to public
resistance to hosting facilities for storage, processing, treatment and final disposal of
MSW.

The failure of LGUs to close open dumps and establish the proper disposal
facilities is now subject to lawsuits. The effect of these lawsuits on LGUs should be
closely monitored. If this will impel them to seriously implement RA 9003, then the
demand for SWM products and equipment will increase tremendously. Since the
establishment of dumps and landfills is costly, many LGUs are pushing for more
composting and recycling activities.

There are reports that the National Solid Waste Management Commission
(NSWMC), the government entity tasked to oversee the implementation of solid waste
management plans, may release information on types of disposal facilities other than SLF
that LGUs may operate by December 2005. These other types of disposal facilities will
have direct impact on the types of SWM products and equipment that will be demanded
by LGUs and their contractors or partners. RA 9003 promotes recycling. To date, only 12
percent of MSW is recycled or reused.

About 50 percent of the countrys solid waste is highly organic (biodegradable)


and recyclable. Thus, composting and recycling have great potential. Composting
activities in barangays are rather crude, using only rotary or mechanical drums or
perforated membranes using aerobic method. While the LGUs have the primary
responsibility in SWM, the private sector may help by putting up production processes
and technologies that prevent and minimize waste generated as well as efficiently treating
and disposing all unavoidable waste products. There are a few private entities with
recycling projects. These include the PET recycling projects of San Miguel Corporation,
a food, beverage and packaging corporation; and the recycling plant for packaging
materials of the Polystyrene Packaging Council of the Philippines, a group of foam
polystyrene producers.
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RA 9003

In the light of growing garbage problem in the country, Republic Act (RA) 9003
also known as the Ecological Solid Waste Management Act of 2000 was enacted by the
Philippine Government.

"The unsystematic disposal and collection of our wastes have posed a tough job
for our government. With the modernization of society, we have come to accumulate
more wastes than we can manage to dispose of properly. Left unmanaged and improperly
disposed, wastes can cause serious heath problems to everyone. Moreover, a dirty
environment defeats the aesthetic potential of our surrounding," the Bureau in its
statement.

In return, RA 9003 provides for a systematic and comprehensive Ecological Solid


Waste Management (ESWM) program for all sectors of society to adopt and implement.

Solid waste refers to all discarded household and commercial waste, non-
hazardous institutional and industrial waste, street sweepings, construction debris,
agricultural waste and non-hazardous/non-toxic solid waste.

ESWM refers to the systematic administration of activities which provide for


segregation at sources, segregated transportation, storage, transfer, processing treatment
and disposal of solid waste and all other waste management activities which do not harm
the environment.

"This is an Act providing for ESWM program, creating the necessary institutional
mechanisms and incentives declaring certain acts prohibited and providing penalties,
appropriating funds therefore and for other purposes."

The basic policies of RA 9003:

A) Ensure the protection of public health and environment;


B) Utilize environmentally sound methods that maximize the utilization of
valuable resources and encourage resources conservation and recovery;
C) Set guidelines and targets for solid waste avoidance and volume reduction
through source reduction and waste minimization measures, including
composting, recycling, re-use, recovery, green charcoal process, and others,
before collection, treatment and disposal inappropriate and environmentally
sound solid waste management facilities in accordance with ecologically
sustainable development principles;
D) Ensure the proper segregation, collection, transport, storage, treatment and
disposal of solid waste through the formulation and adoption of the best
environmental practices in ecological waste management excluding
incineration;
E) Promote national research and development programs for improved solid
waste management and resource conservation techniques, more effective
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institutional arrangement and indigenous and improved methods of waste


reduction, collection, separation and recovery.
F) Encourage greater private sector participation in solid waste management
G) Retain primary enforcement and responsibility of solid waste management
with local government units while establishing a cooperative effort among the
national government, other local government units (LGUs), non-government
organizations and the private sector;
H) Encourage cooperation and self-regulation among waste generators through
the application of market-based instruments;
I) Institutionalize public participation in the development and the
implementation of national and local integrated, comprehensive and
ecological waste management programs; and
J) Strengthen the integration of ecological solid waste management and resource
conservation and recovery topics into the academic curricula of formal and
non-formal education in order to promote environmental awareness among the
citizenry.

A National Solid Waste Management Commission was established as provided by


RA 9003 to oversee the implementation of SWM plans and prescribe policies to achieve
objectives of this Act. The Commission shall be composed of 14 members from the
government sector and 3 members from the private sector.

Mandatory Segregation of solid wastes; each LGU's Ecological Solid Waste


Management (ESWM) Plan must include implementation schedule which shows that
within 5 years after this Act takes effect, the LGU shall divert at least 25 percent of all
solid wastes from waste disposal facilities through reuse, recycling, and composting
activities

Open dumpsites shall not be allowed as disposal sites; and, establishment of


LGU's Material Recovery Facility (MRF) in every barangay or cluster of barangays, a
mandatory provision of Republic act 9003.

MRF is considered as the heart and soul of ecological waste management. The
MRF is a place where wastes are either made into compost and/or recycled. In essence, it
is important place because this is where marketable products out of waste are stored.

Its main components are; Ecology garden, a composting site, not a dumpsite. The
MRF center has also a choice of which method or methods to use; Eco shed or warehouse
where clean recyclable are stored to be sold to the factories.

Article 4 Section 32 provided the establishment of LGU MRF may it be barangay


owned, leased land or any suitable open space which shall be designed to receive, sort,
process and store compostable and recyclable material efficiently and in an
environmentally sound manner.
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The facility shall address considerations such as the building and/or land lay out
and equipment must be designed to accommodate efficient and safe materials processing,
movement, and storage and building must be designed to allow efficient and safe external
access and to accommodate internal flow.

A successful MRF has five key elements ESWM which are; 1) Engineering-
appropriate processing equipment sand design and technically viable and
environmentally sound recycling and reuse process; 2) Education-effective promotion,
information and education campaign for segregation, collection and compliance to
ordinances; 3) Enforcement-Ordinances with IRR that will enable and empower enforcers
and implementers; 4) Environmental Organization supportive ESWM Board and LGU,
adequate information on LGU profile and waste characterization for effective planning
and projections;5) Equity-financially viable management and operation from production
to marketing, availability of support and start-up fund.

In Metro Manila alone there was reportedly around 5,900 tons of garbage or 0.5
kg per person being generated daily. While for areas outside Metro Manila, the waste
generation rate ranges from 0.3 to about 0.5 kg per person a day.
Residents of urban centers produce between 0.5 and 0.7 kg a day, while those in rural
areas generate 0.3 kg per person a day.

There is 29.8 percent of solid waste being collected; Paper and cardboard, plastic
and petroleum products, textiles, Metals, Glass, Leather and rubber.
Reportedly, there are more than 800 open dumps in the country but only a hundred were
controlled.

It is estimated that garbage dumps increases at two percent per year.

http://www.sunstar.com.ph/static/ilo/2005/12/11/news/environment.presents.ra.90
03.html

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