PASIG
CITY - Government agencies band together with BAN Toxics and the United Nations
Industrial Development Organization (UNIDO) in preparing for a project that
hopes to eliminate mercury use in artisanal and small scale-mining in the
country.
The
Environmental Management Bureau of the Department of Environment and Natural
Resources (DENR-EMB), in partnership with UNIDO, BAN Toxics, and the Department
of Health (DOH) are now working on a project dubbed as ‘Improve the Health and
Environment of Artisanal and Small-scale Gold Mining (ASGM) Communities in the
Philippines by Reducing Mercury Emission’.
The
primary aim of the project is to strengthen national capacity to manage mercury
by establishing a formal national institution and training of key stakeholders.
“We fully support the Philippines’ efforts to address the
issue of mercury use in small-scale mining. This project is a testament to the
efforts being undertaken by the Philippines in taking a lead in solving this
difficult and complex issue,” said UNIDO representative Ludovic Bernaudat.
Through
the project, a national ASGM institution will be established to provide
training and certification for miners aiming to reduce and eventually eliminate
the use of mercury in their practice.
The
project will also develop and deliver health education, techniques, and
technology training programs, including early recognition and identification of
mercury poisoning at the community level.
“The beneficiaries of this project are the communities around
small-scale mining areas. If we are able to change the mining methods, the
approach, and bring a common vision and goal among the miners and the
community, BAN Toxics and its partners would have secured a strong measure of
success and pave the way for a long-term solution to the problem,” said BAN Toxics executive
director Atty. Richard Gutierrez during the project’s inception workshop.
According
to a study conducted by the United Nations Environment Program (UNEP), ASGM is
the single largest mercury emitting sector in the Philippines, having been
recognized to discharge about 70 metric tons or more than 30 percent of the
country’s annual mercury releases.
The indiscriminate
use of mercury in ASGM contributes to serious long-term environmental and
health problems burdened with social, technical and institutional issues, as
well as the implementation of regulations.
In 2006,
the United Nations reported that miners in the Philippines are found to have
mercury levels up to 50 times above World Health Organization limits.
BAN Toxics! is an independent
non-government environmental organization focused on the advancement of
environmental justice, children's health, and toxics elimination. Working
closely with government agencies, partner communities and other NGOs in both
the local and international levels, BAN Toxics endeavors to reduce
and eliminate the use of harmful toxins through education campaigns, training
and awareness-raising, and policy-building and advocacy programs.
No comments:
Post a Comment