EcoWaste Coalition Pushes Decentralized Composting to Ease Garbage, Toxic and Soil Woes

An advocate for zero waste resource management today urged the government and the citizenry to rally behind a proven solution to society’s chronic problem with stinking garbage, toxic gases and depleted soils: decentralized composting.

The EcoWaste Coalition gave a big push to the biological breaking down of organic discards as the International Composting Awareness Week is observed from May 6 to 12.

“The intensive composting of biodegradable discards at all areas and levels of waste generation can dramatically reduce the volume of discards assigned for disposal by at least 50 per cent in most cities and municipalities,” said Christina Vergara, Zero Waste Project Officer, EcoWaste Coalition.

According to the National Solid Waste Management Commission, the entire country generates some 35,430 tons of waste per day, of which some 8,000 tons come from Metro Manila.

Of these, 50% are food and other organic discards, 25% plastics, 12% paper, 5% metals, 3% glass, 1% hazardous waste and 4% residual waste.

“Decentralized composting will translate to millions of savings for our cash-strapped local government units (LGUs) due to avoided disposal costs,” she pointed out.

“By separating organic discards at source, we reduce the risk of contaminating recyclable materials and, as a result, increase the value of recyclables and make them safer for waste workers to handle and recycle,” she added.

“Composting further reduces the emission of greenhouse gases such as methane, which is about 70 times stronger than carbon dioxide in terms of trapping heat, by keeping food, garden, farm and other organic discards out of dumpsites and landfills,” she said.

The country has over a thousand waste disposal facilities, including 1,027 open and controlled dumpsites long forbidden by Republic Act 9003, the Ecological Solid Waste Management Act, as well as “sanitary” landfills, cement kilns and incinerators, the EcoWaste Coalition noted.NG

Citing information from the United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific (UNESCAP), the EcoWaste Coalition emphasized the benefits of applying compost as fertilizer in agriculture.

According to the UNESCAP’s Sustainable Urban Development Section, compost:

1. Lightens heavy soils, allowing better infiltration of both air and water.

2. Enhances and improves the soil’s structure, so that it becomes less subject to erosion by either water or wind.

3. Adds nutrients and trace materials to the soil, stimulating biological activity and encouraging vigorous plant rooting systems.

4. Enables soil to retain nutrients and moisture, preventing them from being leached out of the soil and into the ground water.

“With composting, we lessen our dependence to chemical farming and agriculture, while producing safe organic food for our people,” Vergara said.

"It will surely boost the implementation of the Organic Agriculture Act of 2010, especially in rural areas, provided the compost is clean and free of toxics," she added.

-end-


http://compostingcouncil.org/icaw/

http://swapp.org.ph/attachments/article/283/1%20AGUINALDO_Swm%20national%20status_FINAL.pdf

http://www.unescap.org/esd/suds/swm/documents/Decentralized-composting.pdf

Comments

If we have the ability to separate completely the organic compost from the recyclables, plastics and glasses, then we're already half way there. We just have to create an efficient enough plan that'll cover the people, and the market.

-Land Source Container Service, Inc.
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