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Friday, April 4, 2025

BAN Toxics Urges 2025 Political Candidates: Champion a Toxics-Free and Waste-Free Philippines


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In a country teetering on the brink of ecological collapse, one advocacy group is sounding the alarm—and demanding action. With the 2025 midterm elections looming, BAN Toxics, a leading environmental justice organization, is calling on all political aspirants to take a bold stand: protect public health, defend the environment, and champion a toxics-free and waste-free future.

As campaign fever ignites across the Philippines, BAN Toxics warns that beneath the colorful tarpaulins, fiery promises, and motorcades lies a silent and deadly crisis: the unrelenting assault of toxic chemicals and waste on Filipino communities.

“Our daily lives are surrounded by invisible killers—hazardous substances that infiltrate our homes, poison our children, and pollute our lands and waters,” said Jam Lorenzo, Deputy Executive Director of BAN Toxics. “Yet many of our leaders remain indifferent, trapped in outdated policies and half-hearted solutions. The time for complacency is over.”




A Crisis Hidden in Plain Sight

From mercury-laden beauty creams to lead-tainted toys, the Philippine market continues to be flooded with toxic products—many sold cheaply and without proper labels, often reaching the hands of the country’s poorest. Despite existing regulations, enforcement remains alarmingly weak.

A 2023 global study, with the participation of BAN Toxics, revealed a horrifying truth: 90% of skin-lightening products purchased online contained mercury levels far beyond safe limits—some up to 74,800 ppm, an egregious violation of safety norms. Meanwhile, everyday items like ceramic mugs and school supplies continue to carry dangerous levels of cadmium, arsenic, and endocrine-disrupting chemicals.

“We are being slowly poisoned—without consent, without warning,” Lorenzo added. “And our children are the most vulnerable.”

In fact, BAN Toxics’ own studies found that over 62% of plastic toys tested in the local market exceeded safety thresholds, with chemicals known to cause neurological damage, cancer, and developmental delays in children.

A proposed Safe and Non-Hazardous Children’s Products Law, passed by the 17th Congress in 2017, remains unacted upon—gathering dust as toxic toys flood the hands of unsuspecting families.


A Broken Waste System: Overflowing, Polluting, and Burning

But the threat extends beyond consumer products. The Philippines is drowning in garbage.

The Commission on Audit (COA) reported that solid waste generation surged from 9.07 million metric tons in 2000 to 16.63 million in 2020, with projections pointing to a catastrophic 24.5 million tons by 2045. Yet, only 39% of barangays have material recovery facilities, and less than a third of LGUs have access to sanitary landfills.

Incineration, often falsely marketed as “waste-to-energy,” is adding fuel to the fire. These facilities release persistent organic pollutants—dioxins and furans—that are known carcinogens. Healthcare waste, intensified during the COVID-19 pandemic, added an alarming dimension, overwhelming systems with infectious and hazardous materials.

BAN Toxics is calling for a zero-waste revolution—not just better recycling, but real upstream solutions: reducing production, redesigning products, eliminating unnecessary packaging, and holding producers accountable.


Plastic: The Unforgivable Legacy

With 99% of plastics derived from fossil fuels, the industry is not only polluting—it’s accelerating climate change. In 2021 alone, 1 million tons of plastic waste in the Philippines leaked into the environment, while only a minuscule portion was recycled.

Toxic additives like phthalates, PFAS, bisphenols, and flame retardants add another layer of threat—endocrine disruptors known to wreak havoc on the human body.

The current Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) law has failed to deliver. BAN Toxics is now demanding a total ban on single-use plastics, coupled with decisive policy reforms that reduce production and end the era of throwaway culture.


The E-Waste Time Bomb

In 2022, the Philippines generated 537 million kilograms of electronic waste, ranking among the top e-waste producers in Asia. Most of it? Unaccounted for. A recent study revealed that in Quezon City alone, 30% of e-waste is processed informally in junk shops—often by workers unprotected from lead, mercury, and flame retardants.

Without a dedicated e-waste law, the country is unprepared for the digital age’s dark side. BAN Toxics demands an EPR scheme for electronics, tighter import controls, and a comprehensive regulatory framework to manage this growing toxic tide.


Reform the Law. Empower the People. Protect the Planet.

The Ecological Solid Waste Management Act (RA 9003), once hailed as a progressive step, now groans under the weight of poor implementation. Informal waste workers—unsung heroes of recycling—remain unsupported, without health insurance, training, or tools.

BAN Toxics is calling for a full review and overhaul of the law: more MRFs, equitable landfill access, and formal integration of waste pickers into the national system.


Global Agreements, Local Commitments

BAN Toxics reminds candidates that real leadership includes honoring global commitments:

Minamata Convention – Phase out mercury and transition miners to safe alternatives.

Basel Ban Amendment – Ban hazardous waste imports.

Stockholm Convention – Enforce bans on POPs like dioxins and furans.

Paris Agreement – Align with global climate goals.

Global Plastics Treaty – Prioritize health and sustainability over industry lobbying.


Panatang Luntian: A Green Oath for the Future

BAN Toxics is part of Panatang Luntian, an expansive green agenda aimed at confronting the full spectrum of environmental threats—from deforestation to climate injustice. Aspiring leaders are invited to adopt this oath, committing not only to short-term gains but to long-term planetary survival.


“This is a moment of reckoning,” concluded Lorenzo. “The environment is not a side issue—it is the foundation of life itself. We urge every candidate in 2025 to stand for a Philippines that is safe, sustainable, and free from toxic threats. The future depends on it.”


To learn more about the Panatang Luntian and BAN Toxics’ advocacy, visit: https://bit.ly/m/PanatangLuntian


In 2025, let us not vote for promises. Let us vote for protection, prevention, and the preservation of life.

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