Yahoo – AFP,
22 September 2017
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| More than 54,200 pieces of plastic waste were recovered from Manila Bay during a week-long clean-up campaign, Greenpeace said |
Western consumer
giants are polluting oceans by selling products packaged in cheap, disposable
plastic to Filipinos, Greenpeace has claimed -- naming Nestle, Unilever and
Procter & Gamble among the worst offenders.
The
environmental group ranked the Philippines as the "third-worst polluter
into the world's oceans" after China and Indonesia in a report released
Friday in Manila.
Single-use
plastics from products sold by conglomerates, such as bags, bottle labels, and
straws, stood out during a week-long Greenpeace clean-up campaign held on
Manila Bay this month, it said.
More than
54,200 pieces of plastic waste were recovered from the bay in total, including
some 9,000 from Nestle products -- the most frequently-seen brand, according to
a tally kept by the group.
"These
corporations are the missing piece in the global fight against plastic
pollution," Greenpeace campaigner Abigail Aguilar said in a statement.
Greenpeace
said plastic waste was a particularly serious problem in "sachet
economies" like the Philippines and other developing countries, where
people on limited incomes are pushed to buy cheap goods in small quantities.
In the
Philippines, a country of 103 million people with high levels of poverty,
products sold in single-use sachets include instant coffee, shampoo, cooking
oil, food seasoning and toothpaste.
These
low-value disposable sachets usually end up in landfill or as litter or marine
debris, according to Greenpeace.
Nestle
provided Aguilar details of its "environmental sustainability
projects" on Friday, she said.
Unilever,
number two on the Greenpeace list, and number five Procter & Gamble did not
respond to the group's correspondence, said regional Greenpeace spokeswoman
Angelica Pago.
The
solutions proposed by Nestle were "still promoting incineration and
end-of-pipe solutions, while Greenpeace advocates for waste reduction and
banning of single-use plastics altogether", Pago added.
Nestle told
AFP it was putting together material to explain its waste management efforts,
but that the presentation would not be ready until next week. Procter &
Gamble and Unilever did not immediately respond to AFP's request for comment.
Greenpeace
said the Philippines contributed 1.88 million tonnes of "mismanaged
plastic waste" each year, with Thailand, Vietnam and Malaysia also on its
list of the world's biggest ocean plastic polluters.
The problem
is expected to worsen as these countries' growing economies lead to rising
incomes and "exploding demand for consumer products", the campaign
group said.
Plastic
waste from products made by Indonesian firm PT Torabika Mayora was third
most-seen on Manila Bay, Greenpeace said, with local firm Universal Robina Corp
at number four.

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