New Year, Clean Coast! Individual Donors Join WWF-Philippines in Cleaning the South of Manila Bay
January 2020
Representatives from WWF-Philippines take a group photo with donors who joined the organization’s first coastal clean-up for 2020 at LPPCHEA.
Last January 25, 2020, the World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) Philippines, together with the Bakawan Warriors of the Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR), organized a coastal clean-up at the Las Piñas-Parañaque Critical Habitat and Ecotourism Area (LPPCHEA) to celebrate a clean start to the new year. LPPCHEA is a nature reserve situated south of Manila Bay, covering around 175 hectares of wetland ecosystem. It consists of two islands - Freedom Island and Long Island - with mangroves, ponds and lagoons, mudflats, salt marshes, and mixed beach forests. Led by the WWF-Philippines’ Individual Donors Program, the coastal clean-up was attended by both the organization’s monthly donors and one-time donors who wished to give the Manila Bay coastline a fresh start this 2020.
Stephy Navarrete, WWF-Philippines’ Individual Donors Program Manager, leading the coastal clean-up along with Jacqui Miller, President/Owner of Dynamic Business Outsourcing Solutions, who joined the activity.
Stephy Navarrete, WWF-Philippines’ Individual Donors Program Manager, welcomed over 30 participants early in the morning during the clean-up orientation. “The Philippines has been ranked as the world’s third largest source of plastic leaking into the ocean, and we also have one of the highest trash collection rates in Southeast Asia. We generate 2.7 million tonnes of garbage per year, and 74% of plastic leakage actually comes from garbage that has already been collected,” says Navarrete. “WWF-Philippines’ firm stand against plastic pollution has been solidified in 2018 when we launched our #AyokoNgPlastik campaign, and through initiatives like this coastal clean-up, we wish to invite you, our supporters, to join us in urgently addressing this problem in order for us to preserve and protect areas like LPPCHEA, for both Filipinos and the migratory birds who use it as a resting stop.”
Most of the garbage collected during the coastal clean-up consisted of single-use plastics used as packaging for food, personal care products, and other types of fast moving consumer goods.
The coastal clean-up proved to be very fruitful as the team was able to collect a total of 551 kgs of waste, of which 11 kgs were glass, 9 kgs were styro, 6.5 kgs were rubber, 206.5 kgs were plastic, and 308 kgs were other waste materials. All in all, 36 sacks of garbage were collected - containing waste that would have otherwise continued to pollute the critical habitat and our oceans.
“Kaya ako sumama dito sa coastal clean-up kasi I wanted to do something productive and helpful sa environment natin, rather than just nasa bahay lang ako. Narealize ko dito, sobrang daming kalat, kahit saan ka magpunta dito, sobrang dami mo nang madadampot. Parang hindi siya matatapos sa isang araw o kahit isang buwan, kailangan talagang magtulung-tulong lahat ng tao (The reason why I joined this coastal clean-up was because I wanted to do something productive and helpful for the environment, rather than just staying at home. Today, I realized that there’s just so much trash, anywhere you go here, there’s a lot of trash that you can pick and clean up. It really won’t be fully cleaned even if you stay here all day or even all month, that’s why we really need to work together),” says Joseph Ryan Victoria, a WWF-Philippines regular donor since 2016.
Joseph Ryan Victoria (in black), a WWF regular donor since 2016, weighing one of the sacks of garbage collected during the coastal clean-up with DENR’s Bakawan Warriors.
Although one coastal clean-up will not solve the plastic pollution issue the country is experiencing, WWF-Philippines believes that transformative and collaborative action with different stakeholders, including our donors, will pave the way towards addressing the root of the problem. The organization is reinforcing the campaign against plastic pollution through the adoption and implementation of the No Plastics in Nature Initiative, a global WWF approach that intends to stop the flow of plastics entering nature by 2030 through elimination of unnecessary plastics, doubling reuse, recycling, and recovery, and ensuring that remaining plastics are sourced responsibly.
We would like to thank our donors for their continued support to WWF-Philippines and its programs, and we are looking forward to organizing more initiatives which will allow us to immediately act and respond to the climate crisis.
Help us protect the most biologically-significant ecosystems in the Philippines. Join our loyal donors and be a WWF Ranger today!
For more information, please contact:
Ms. Stephy Navarrete
Individual Donor Program Manager
snavarrete@wwf.org.ph
For media arrangements, please contact:
Ms. Pam Luber
Integrated Communications Manager
pluber@wwf.org.ph