Green orgs gather
to strengthen support for EPR bill
By
GREENPEACE
November 6, 2015
MANILA – Greenpeace
Philippines, Ecowaste Coalition, and Medicins Du Monde (MDM) bring
together various civil society groups to strengthen the civil society
push on the Extended Producers Responsibility (EPR) Bill on electronic
waste (e-waste).
EPR is a policy principle to
promote total life cycle environmental improvements of product systems
by extending the responsibilities of the manufacturer of the product
to various parts of the product’s life cycle, and especially to the
take-back, recovery and final disposal of the product. E-waste are
electronic products such as mobile phones, computers, television sets,
and other electronic appliances and equipment that have become
unwanted, non-working or obsolete, and have reached the end of their
useful life.
Greenpeace believes that a
policy on EPR is urgently needed in the Philippines to tackle this
“unprecedented tsunami of e-waste,” especially now that technology
advances at a very fast rate, and electronic products are becoming
obsolete and not useful in a few years. Such a policy addresses both
waste and pollution problems and makes consumption both more
economically and environmentally sustainable.
“We need a strong and united
civil society to push for the passage of the EPR bill to protect the
environment and its inhabitants from pollution brought about by the
proliferation of e-waste,” said Abigail Aguilar, Toxics Campaigner of
Greenpeace Philippines. “The bill will ultimately put the burden of
controlling and disposing the increasing number of e-waste to its
producers – the big companies who have the capacity to treat and
properly dispose their discarded or end-of-life products. When
producers face the physical burden of recycling or taking back their
products, they are now compelled to design much more sustainable, less
toxic, easily recyclable electronics. EPR encourages the producers to
then design their products with recycling as an end goal or perhaps
create products that simply last longer.”
E-waste has been considered
the fastest rising toxic waste stream. A study released by the United
Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) last May 2015 stated that the
electronic industry produces up to 41 million tonnes of e-waste each
year, up to 90 percent of which is illegally traded or dumped in
developing countries.
The growing e-waste crisis
is creating even more problems than what the Philippines can handle.
Hazardous materials create even more toxic waste and health impacts,
especially for the informal laborers and waste pickers, communities
who are the most exposed to heavy metals such as lead, cadmium,
mercury, chromium, halogenated substances including brominated
flame-retardants, and polyvinyl chloride (PVC).
“We believe in the
importance of advocating for the promotion of informal workers’
rights. The EPR bill acknowledges the contribution of the informal
sector to the management of e-waste. This recognition will promote
workers’ rights such as safe work practices, will contribute to reduce
the exposure to toxicants contained into electrical and electronic
equipment (EEE) of informal e-waste dismantlers and their families,
and therefore to protect their health. By addressing the
responsibilities to reduce toxicity and waste, the EPR bill promotes
the protection of the environment, which is one determinant of global
health,” said Elena Vicario, General Coordinator of MDM.
Over the years, efforts to
deal with e-waste legislation have been unsuccessful. The Philippines
is a signatory to the 1989 Basel Convention, but not to the Basel Ban
Amendment, which bans all exports of hazardous wastes from developed
countries to all other countries for any reason. This will allow
import of e-waste for processing.
Philippine NGOs has been lobbying
for the ratification on the Basel Ban Amendment.
Currently, the DENR has
initiated the drafting of the “Guidelines On The Environmentally Sound
Management (ESM) Of Waste Electrical And Electronic Equipment (WEEE)”
which organizations like Greenpeace, Ecowaste Coalition, and MDM have
welcomed and support.
“With EPR, we hope to bring
about a design revolution that will cut, if not eliminate, hazardous
substances in electronic and electrical products and reduce the
hazards these products pose during manufacturing, recycling and
disposal. By designing toxics out of e-products, we minimize
occupational exposure to dangerous pollutants, especially among
factory workers and recyclers,” said Thony Dizon, Coordinator of
EcoWaste Coalition's Project Protect.