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DENR to provide 178 LGUs with shredder-composter machines

TO help the 178 local government units (LGUs) located within the Manila Bay Region to strictly comply with Ecological Solid Waste Management Act of 2000, the Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR) will be providing them with industrial-grade shredder-composter machines.

Benny Antiporda, DENR Undersecretary for Solid Waste Management and LGUs Concerns, said these 178 LGUs can expect their equipment within the year.

Antiporda said the first batch of shredder-composter equipment was already turned over to Pampanga LGUs—San Fernando City and the towns of Apalit, Candaba, Guagua and Magalang.

The Manila Bay region is comprised of the National Capital Region and eight provinces from Regions III and IV-A, namely, Bataan, Bulacan, Pampanga, Nueva Ecija, Tarlac, Laguna, Rizal and Cavite.

During the recent turnover ceremony held at the DENR Central Office in Quezon City, Antiporda said the agency will continue to provide LGUs the necessary support to ensure their compliance with RA 9003.

Sad to say, compliance is slow particularly where LGUs lack the means for full and prompt compliance. This is where the DENR steps in, in line with its mandate to provide technical assistance and other capability-building assistance to LGUs,” said Antiporda.

A shredder-composter set includes a brand new composter that can process one ton of compost material within 24 hours, and a brand new shredder with the capacity to process two tons of organic waste per day.

Senator Cynthia A. Villar, chair of the Senate Committee on Environment and Natural Resources, was the keynote speaker during the event. It was highlighted by the signing of the project’s Memorandum of Agreement between the DENR and the LGUs represented by their respective local executives.

Citing statistics from the National Solid Waste Management Commission, Antiporda said around 52 percent of the municipal wastes in the country is biodegradable.

Antiporda added that providing LGUs with the equipment will not only reduce the amount of waste that end up in sanitary landfills but will also transform the diverted wastes into assets as organic fertilizer, which is valuable to agriculture and horticulture.

Transportation na lang po ang gagastusin nila dito,” Antiporda added, referring to the cost for the farmers availing of the organic fertilizers from the equipment.

Antiporda disclosed that the provision of the equipment will also help increase the collection of recyclable materials, which account for some 28 percent of the country’s municipal wastes.

The difficulty in recovering recyclable materials has been largely blamed on contamination by biodegradable materials like food wastes.