Villar Foundation cites landfill dependence risks; highlights recycling, waste reduction efforts
At A Glance
- The Villar Foundation's waste recycling initiatives inducing its plastic -to -chair manufacturing as well as its kitchen and garden waste composting have been highlighted as concrete, community- based solutions to landfill hazards.
The Villar Foundation has donated hundreds of recycled chairs to public schools throughout the years (Contributed photo)
The Villar Foundation’s waste recycling initiatives inducing its plastic -to -chair manufacturing as well as its kitchen and garden waste composting have been highlighted as concrete, community- based solutions to landfill hazards.
These initiatives took on a deeper meaning because of the tragic collapse of the Binaliw sanitary landfill in Cebu, an incident that claimed at least 36 lives.
It renewed urgent calls to expose the dangers of continued reliance on overfilled and poorly managed dumpsites. The tragedy also underscored a harsh reality: landfills fail when waste reduction, segregation, and recovery are neglected.
Environmental advocates note that both plastic and organic waste significantly contribute to landfill volume, methane emissions, and structural instability when left unmanaged.
For more than two decades, the Villar Foundation has implemented waste management and recycling programs that have helped Las Piñas City significantly reduce the volume of non-biodegradable and biodegradable waste ending up in landfills.
Data from the foundation indicate that 80 percent of community waste is diverted from landfills, significantly reducing the risks posed by overfilled and unstable disposal sites. Kitchen and garden waste, which make up 50 percent of total waste, is processed into organic fertilizer.
Meanwhile, 15 percent of soft plastics--including sachets and other packaging materials--are converted into durable school chairs or sent to accredited recycling facilities.
An additional 15 percent of paper waste is recovered, sold, and recycled through paper recycling factories. Collectively, these efforts significantly reduce the volume of waste sent to disposal sites, thus easing the burden on such facilities.
"Landfills are filling up because we continue to treat waste as a problem instead of a resource,” said former Senator Cynthia Villar, managing director of the Villar Foundation.
“What happened in Cebu is a reminder that we must act decisively. Zero Waste Month calls on all sectors to divert waste at the source-whether plastic, paper, kitchen, or garden waste, before it reaches landfills,” she added.
The foundation’s kitchen and garden waste recycling program converts biodegradable waste into organic fertilizer, diverting food scraps and yard trimmings-more than half of household waste-from landfills and reducing methane emissions. The compost is distributed free of charge to support urban gardens, community farms, and agricultural projects.
Alongside this, discarded plastics are recycled into durable school chairs, each using about 20 kilograms of plastic waste. Together, these initiatives significantly reduce the volume of waste sent to disposal facilities and demonstrate how proper segregation and localized recycling can keep a large share of household waste out of landfills.
The success of the Villar Foundation’s recycling programs in Las Piñas led to the expansion of similar facilities nationwide, totaling 118 composting facilities and three plastic recycling factories; Las Piñas City (for Luzon), San Miguel, Iloilo (for the Visayas), and Cagayan de Oro (for the Mindanao region).
Beyond environmental protection, these initiatives create livelihoods through waste collection, segregation, composting, and facility operations—proving that zero-waste programs can generate jobs while protecting communities.
Recycled school chairs have been distributed to public schools nationwide, while compost supports food security and local greening efforts.
As the Cebu landfill tragedy highlights the urgency of waste reform, the Villar Foundation’s integrated approach shows that landfill dependence is not inevitable.