The Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR) has exceeded its year-end targets for environmental programs on solid waste management, clean air and clean water, which comprised the top priorities of Secretary Roy Cimatu under his term.
The agency’s program on solid waste management topped the list of its major accomplishments in 2018, having exceeded its target for the implementation of rehabilitation and closure plans for open and controlled dumpsites by 22 percent.
The agency’s program on solid waste management topped the list of its major accomplishments in 2018.
Through its Environmental Management Bureau (EMB), the DENR was supposed to monitor only 535 closure and rehabilitation plans of local government units (LGUs) this year, but it ended up monitoring 654 as of November.
It also successfully monitored 919 materials recovery facilities (MRFs), which is around 11 percent higher than the original target of 829 MRFs for 2018. Both the implementation of closure and rehabilitation plans and the establishment of MRFs by LGUs are mandated under Republic Act 9003, or the Ecological Solid Waste Management Act of 2000.
Also in 2018, the National Solid Waste Management Commission—an interagency body chaired by the DENR—was able to approve a record 322 solid waste management plans (SWMPs) of LGUs, bringing to 806 the total number of approved SWMPs since the enactment of RA 9003.
The DENR also surpassed its 2018 targets in connection with the implementation of RA 8749, or the Clean Air Act of 1999.
DENR registered a 102 percent accomplishment in terms of monitoring the compliance of industries to emission standards set by the Environmental Management Bureau.
It registered a 102 percent accomplishment in terms of monitoring the compliance of industries to emission standards set by the EMB. A total of 16,117 industries were monitored for their emissions in 2018.
There was also 100 percent accomplishment in the formulation and updating of 22 airshed action plans and maintenance of 98 air quality monitoring stations (AQMS) across the country. Properly maintained AQMS are crucial to the monitoring of air quality in Metro Manila and other urban centers.
As part of its implementation of RA 9275 or the Clean Water Act of 2004, the DENR was able to monitor the compliance of 8,664 firms or industries, equivalent to 122 percent of the annual target of 7,123.
The DENR had also entered into 92 agreements with LGUs under the Adopt an Estero or Water Body Program, instead of the original target of 64.
Six new water quality management areas (WQMAs) were also designated this year. These are Lower Amburayan River System; Dupong, Matlang, and Merida; Malabon-Navotas-Tullahan-Tinajeros River System; Iyam-Dumacaa Rivers; and Las Piñas-Parañaque River System.
According to Cimatu, WQMA is a significant tool in enforcing the country’s clean water law. It aims for the improvement of water quality to meet the guidelines under which water bodies have been classified or to improve their classification and meet their potential use, he added.
As soon as he assumed the DENR post in May 2017, Cimatu vowed to prioritize environmental protection through full implementation of existing laws on clean air, clean water and solid waste management.