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Home Opinion

Extended Producers Responsibility (EPR) will help LGUs get rid of plastic pollution

Gerardo Reyes Jr by Gerardo Reyes Jr
July 6, 2021
in Opinion
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Composting our biodegradable solid wastes
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Companies polluting the environment with plastic wastes because of their product’s single-use plastic or sachet packaging should bear the responsibility in order to encourage environment-friendly product packaging that minimizes negative impacts on human health and the environment.

Many local government units (LGUs) in the country are pushing for this, to help them intensify cleanup activities in their territorial jurisdiction, considering that most of the LGUs lack the resources to perform massive cleanup to rid plastic pollution.

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It has been observed in many towns and cities in the country that most of these manufacturers or producers are producing biscuits, snack food or chips, soaps, shampoo and other products with plastic packaging or sachets.

The City of Puerto Princesa is among those who believed that private companies that contribute to the increasing spread of plastic wastes to our environment should help LGUs through their Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) programs.

The City Environment and Natural Resources Officer (City ENRO) of Puerto Princesa City, Atty. Carlo B. Gomez has proposed that private companies should take responsibility for the plastic wastes that they are producing.

The proposal is based on the Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) as a policy approach under which producers are given a significant responsibility – financial and/or physical – for the treatment or disposal of post-consumer products.

The polluters must pay

If LGUs will invoke its authority, it can save sizeable amount from its annual budget allocated for the fuels of the garbage collection, management and operation of the disposal facilities, and in solid waste management, in general. They can actually oblige private companies to help them perform the intensive cleanup and rid plastic sachets and plastic packaging from coastal areas, water bodies, etc. since they are the primary cause of this plastic pollution.

The book, “Access to Environmental Justice: A Sourcebook on Environmental Rights and Legal Remedies,” published by the Supreme Court in 2011, under the Development Framework and Capacity Assessment on Environmental Justice Project of the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), presented that the “polluter-pays” principle states that public authorities should refrain from subsidizing the pollution control costs of the private enterprises instead these private enterprises should bear the cost of controlling the pollution that they caused.

This principle has been applied by the courts in the United States, Japan, Colombia and India in cases requiring toxic cleanup. It has in fact been adopted in the European Union to rationalize the imposition of stiff taxes on tobacco due to its contribution to smoke pollution.

Why EPR is the way to go?

EPR is a fundamental principle of “Zero Waste”, also known as Product Stewardship, said Eco-Cycle-a US-based recycler. It is a strategy that places a shared responsibility for end-of-life management of consumer products on the manufacturers of the products, while encouraging product design that minimizes negative impacts on human health and the environment at every stage of the product’s lifecycle.

EPR basically extends the polluter pays principle to the majority of the waste stream, specifically products and packaging. If you manufacture or produce a product, you should be fully responsible for the pollution it causes as well as the costs of dealing with it when the consumer is done using it. Right now, the financial burden and infrastructure needed—like collection, disposal, management of solid wastes, operation and maintenance of the sanitary landfills and other final disposal facilities, falls upon to the Local Government Units (LGU). While most cities in our country, have their functional sanitary landfills, most of the municipalities do not have. These municipalities are cash-strapped or financially constrained to perform its duties to properly manage the solid wastes in their respective localities.

Most importantly, EPR restores fairness to the system because it is not fair if all taxpayers will be burdened for paying for the actions of some—but rather the manufacturers and producers of these products with plastic packaging should cover the full costs of their actions.

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