IT IS so simple in theory but complicated in application. We have
been told so often and for some time that plastic bags have a negative
impact on the environment. This is even more telling in a flood-prone
country such as ours, where plastic bags clog our overtaxed sewage
systems. The big problem isn't just that plastic bags take forever to
disintegrate, it is the massive number of plastic bags Filipinos use,
reuse and eventually throw away. The bags in clear, white, red, blue,
yellow and other shades are choking the life out of the cities.
It is therefore elementary to expect that any step toward the
complete eradication of plastic bags would be lauded and, more
importantly, supported through action. Yet an environmentally conscious
solution to the plastic bags problem may need the push of legislation to
ever be effective in this country.
That is why Senate Bill 2759, authored by Sen. Loren Legarda, is most
timely and even carries with it a sense of urgency, as does Sen.
Ferdinand Marcos Jr.'s Senate Bill 2749. Legarda's bill asks
supermarkets, restaurants and retail stores to cease using plastic bags. As the problems of pollution, environmental degradation and severe
weather shifts escalate, all sectors of society must act with dispatch.
Individuals must make conscious efforts to change our daily routine and
practices to produce a positive impact on our environment, Legarda
said.
What is significant in Legarda's bill is that it not only calls on
individual Filipinos to stop using plastic bags, it also calls on
business establishments, which hand out plastic bags for almost every
transaction, to take responsibility for the bags disastrous effect on
our environment and surroundings. Companies must change their economic
mind-set, wasteful production processes and packaging methods from the
use of seemingly cost-effective plastic bags into investing in long-term
reusable and recyclable bags which are more sustainable in the long
run, Legarda explained.
Marcos bill takes that a step further by advocating the use of
biodegradable bags to protect the land. Through this bill, consumers
are encouraged to reduce and eventually eliminate the use of plastic
bags, thereby saving the fragile life of the environment, he said. This
may seem counter-intuitive, but the idea is to find a way to stop using
plastic bags altogether, be it by the singular Filipino or by large
corporations.
It sounds so easy to do. After all, isn't banning the use of plastic
bags a universal idea we can all get behind? But you would be surprised;
someone is already trying and it has proven to be far more difficult
than expected.
In 2010, Muntinlupa City took a huge step forward when Mayor Aldrin
San Pedro signed into law Ordinance 101-109 which banned plastic bags
and containers made from polysterene and called for environment-friendly
substitutes. It sounds like the kind of forward-thinking, metropolitan
rule-crafting that constituents would wholeheartedly support. But
Muntinlupa has met resistance after it began implementing the ordinance
last January. Businesses, large and small, were a source of immediate
defiance. An industry group, the Philippine Plastics Industry
Association said that the problem wasn't the plastic, it was the lack of
discipline. The Philippine Association of Supermarkets Inc. argued that
paper bags were five times more costly than plastic bags.
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