spot_img
Saturday, July 5, 2025
Today's Print

Plastic wastes impair sustainability goals

The Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR) strongly called for a united and urgent action against plastic pollution, citing the Philippines’ critical role in the global fight against environmental degradation.

DENR Secretary Maria Antonia Yulo-Loyzaga said during the recent Environment and Natural Resources Day 2025 celebration in Makati City that strong cooperation across sectors and communities was the key to solving the plastic crisis.

- Advertisement -

“The rapidly increasing levels of plastic pollution represent a serious global environmental issue that has grave consequences to the environmental, social, economic and health dimensions of our quest towards sustainable development,” she said.

Loyzaga added that tackling plastic pollution demands a unified, bold and science-based action, as it has also become a climate change issue, as most of the plastics used today are derived from fossil fuels.

The DENR chief also said the Philippines needs more infrastructure for segregation, recovery and recycling to properly address the growing plastic waste problem.

“We need more support, public funds and private sector’s resources and technical capacity to cover whole waste management services at the local government (LGU) level,” she said.

Loyzaga said plastics release greenhouse gases (GHG) into the atmosphere, which degrade the environment when unmanaged.

Based on studies, she said by 2050, the GHG emissions from plastic could reach 56 gigatons, which she said is equivalent to 10 percent to 13 percent of the entire remaining carbon budget.

According to the UN Environment Program (UNEP), plastic production has risen exponentially in the last decades, estimated to be at around 400 million tons per year, and this figure is set to double by 2040.

Loyzaga said the Philippines currently produces around 61,000 metric tons of solid waste daily, of which 12 percent to 24 percent comprises plastic.

“Filipinos utilize, take note, 163 million plastic sachet packets, 48 million shopping bags and 45 million thin-film bags daily. Thirty three percent of that waste finds its way into landfills and dumpsites, and around 35 percent is leaked into the open environment and into our oceans,” she said.

Loyzaga stressed that the Philippines is one of the world’s reported highest contributors to plastic waste.

Yulo-Loyzaga said the DENR is now working with concerned stakeholders, including multilateral development banks, such as the Asian Development Bank (ADB) and non-government organizations (NGO) partners such as Clean Rivers of the UAE’s Zayed Foundation (Erth Zayed Philanthropies), to rehabilitate important historical, cultural and economic areas such as the Pasig River, Laguna de Bay and Manila Bay.Marita Moaje, PNA

She added the DENR was enforcing the Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) Law, which requires companies to collect and recycle 80 percent of their plastic packaging by 2028. Marita Moaje, PNA

Leave a review

JUST IN

spot_imgspot_imgspot_imgspot_img
Popular Categories
Advertisementspot_imgspot_imgspot_imgspot_img