Illegal shipment of waste back in South Korea


By Chito Chavez 

The 51 containers of illegal trash from South Korea arrived at Pyeontaek City Sunday after it was transported last Jan. 14 from the Mindanao International Container Terminal (MICT) in Misamis Oriental.

Bureau of Custom in Tagoloan, Misamis Oriental opened three out 51 containers of illegal garbage exports from South Korea which will be re-exported Jan. 13, 2019. (BONITA ERMAC / MANILA BULLETIN) Bureau of Custom in Tagoloan, Misamis Oriental opened three out 51 containers of illegal garbage exports from South Korea which will be re-exported Jan. 13, 2019. (BONITA ERMAC / MANILA BULLETIN FILE PHOTO)

Based on the information sent by MICT Port Collector John Simon to the EcoWaste Coalition, the MV Spectrum, the ship carrying the shipment, carried the first batch of returned Korean garbage amounting to 1,400 tons.

The news drew cheers from the EcoWaste Coalition, a Quzeon-City based non-profit waste and pollution watch group in the Philippines.
“We mark this occasion as a special day to celebrate the rule of law and the reign of environmental justice, and we thank the governments and peoples of the Philippines and South Korea for making this happen,” said Aileen Lucero, National Coordinator, EcoWaste Coalition.
However, Lucero said “this landmark victory is still incomplete as bulk of the dumped garbage, over 5,100 tons, are still stranded in the town of Tagoloan, Misamis Oriental, posing health and environmental hazards”.

The group had written Ambassador Han Dong-man last Jan. 15 to thank South Korea for its expeditious response, and to urge it to continue its positive collaboration with the Philippine authorities to ensure the speedy re-export of the remaining garbage.

In their letter, the EcoWaste Coalition also expressed its objection to “any move to delay the repatriation of the illegal garbage cargoes or to have (them) treated or disposed of in the Philippines”.

“For the last six months, the waste materials dumped in Tagoloan have been exposed to direct sunlight and rain.  Many of the bags are now damaged and have to be replaced in preparation for their re-export to South Korea,” Lucero said.
“To speed up their re-export, we request the South Korean government to intercede and assume responsibility for their re-bagging as the consignee has failed to do its job due to alleged lack of resources,” she noted.
In July 2018, a boatload of plastic waste materials arrived in Tagoloan. The shipment, wrongly declared as “plastic synthetic flakes,” was exported by the Korean company Green Soko and consigned to a Filipino-Korean company Verde Soko.

Another batch of similar mixed waste cargoes entered the port in October 2018 bringing the total shipments to 6,500 tons.  Last January 14, 51 containers, or about 1,400 tons of garbage, left MICT for PCTC.
Among the materials found in the unsorted plastic waste shipments were plastic bottles, straws, gloves, shower hose, utensils, toothbrushes, Styrofoams, wrappers, and cellophane.

Also included were textiles, wood, metal rods, vinyl tiles, broken glasses, paper boxes, spray cans, shoes, slippers, gloves, diapers, as well as electronic waste.

The garbage shipments violated Philippine and South Korean laws, as well as international law via the Basel Convention on the Control of Transboundary Movements of Hazardous Wastes and Their Disposal.