Manila Bay Continues To Be a Free Dumping Ground, 12 Million Pieces of Marine Litters Found
In a new study presented by the Ecowaste Coalition, a toxic-free and zero-waste watchdog group, in partnership with Korea International Cooperation Agency (KOICA), De LaSalle University-Dasmarinas, and the Department of Environment and Natural Resources, it showed that the Bay is inundated with 12 million pieces of marine litters, 90% of which are plastic litter. Most of the plastic litter collected was hard, film and other types of plastic, majority of which are single-use plastics (SUPs).
The study entitled “Marine Litter Monitoring Survey in Manila Bay: Year 1 (2023) report, a component of the”Enhancement of Marine Litter Management in Manila Bay, Philippines (2021-2025) project, aimed to classify marine litter in the 10 coastal areas along Manila Bay covered by the study, to compare marine litter during dry and wet months, and identify top items of marine litter based on actual counts. Through quantitative comparative research covering 10 areas in National Capital Region, Region 3, and Region 4A, the study concluded that:
- Around 90% of all collected marine litter along the coastline areas are different types of plastic. Most of them are single-use utensils, sachets, and wrappers.
- 11 million out of 12 million estimated marine litter collected along the coast of Manila Bay are plastics.
- The collected marine litter in the coastline of Manila Bay during dry and wet months dis not show any significant difference in terms of counts and weight. It is estimated that nearly 60% of the weights of marine litter in the coastline of Manila Bay were from the weights of plastic litter. Fiber, film, and hard plastics have a combined weight of more than 240 metric tons.
“The publication of this survey report is important because it is one of the first comprehensive comparative studies of marine litter that is present in the coast of Manila Bay. This can be the basis for public and private institutions on their programs and activities relating to Manila Bay. Furthermore, this can guide our policy makers and authorities in crafting policies in managing litter that ends up in the Bay” Dr. Johnny A. Ching, Assistant Vice Chancellor for Research, DLSU-Dasmarinas.
Manila Bay is bordered by the coastal cities of the National Capital Region or NCR (Manila, Pasay, Paranaque, Las Piñas, and Navotas), and the coastal provinces of Bataan, Pampanga, Bulacan in Region 3, and Cavite in Region 4A. It is intersected by the 7 major rivers, draining 26 catchment basins. These rivers are the major sources of marine pollution in the Bay.
Reacting to the enormous number of plastic litter found in the Bay, Ecowaste stated that, “We are alarmed that marine litter, mostly from single use plastics, are stuck in the coastal areas of Manila Bay. Studies show that single use plastics pose a grave danger for vulnerable communities and is an escalating crisis for the environment, health, and climate. The study shows that we have a long way to go to eliminate the ubiquitous problem of single-use plastics and marine litter as a whole”. Von Vladimir L. Defuntorum, Project Lead, Enhancement of Marine Litter Management in Manila Bay, Philippines (2021-2025) Project, Ecowaste Coalition.
Ecowaste coalition highlights that this survey report study is one of the first studies that they will conduct that aims to classify the marine litter trend in Manila Bay during wet and dry seasons.
Access the report through: bit.ly/MarineLitterMNLYear1
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