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EcoWaste Coalition Urges Erap to Rectify Environmental Pollution from Manila Crematorium

A
waste and pollution watch group has urged the administration of Mayor Joseph
“Erap” Estrada to initiate urgent measures that will make the Manila North
Cemetery Crematorium compliant with Republic Act 8749, the Clean Air Act.
The EcoWaste Coalition sought Estrada’s help in improving the facility after
obtaining confirmation from the Environmental Management Bureau – National
Capital Region (EMB-NCR) last Friday, November 25, that the facility has no
valid Permit to Operate.
The group had earlier notified Estrada that the crematorium’s Permit to Operate
issued by the EMB-NCR on May 13, 2009 had expired on May 13, 2014.  The
Clean Air Act, which then President Estrada signed into a law in 1999, requires
all sources of air pollution covered by this law to have a valid Permit to
Operate.
Photos taken by the group on October 25 and November 5 this year and submitted
to both the Office of Mayor Estrada and the EMB-NCR showed thick dark smoke
being emitted from the crematorium’s stack.

“While we have no idea on the actual toxicity of the gaseous
emissions coming from the crematorium stack
at the time when the photos were taken, studies have shown that
crematories discharge various types of environmental pollutants, including
carbon monoxide, nitrogen oxide, sulphur dioxide, hydrogen chloride, dioxins,
furans, formaldehyde and mercury vapor, as well as minuscule particulate
matters,” wrote Aileen Lucero, EcoWaste Coalition’s National Coordinator, to
Estrada.   
“We are particularly concerned that mercury, a neurotoxin, is being emitted
into the atmosphere from the dental amalgam of deceased persons being
cremated,” she added. 
According to the “Mercury Inventory and Assessment in the Philippines”
published by the Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR), the
total mercury output or emission from crematoria is
1,530 kg of mercury per year.  This constitutes 0.65% of the 234,031 kg of
mercury emitted to the country’s environment from different source categories.
“We bring this matter to your urgent attention as the crematory may be
operating in a manner that is jeopardizing the health of facility workers and
other Manileños,” Lucero told Estrada.
The stack
emissions may be affecting
candle and flower vendors in the vicinity, the commuters passing through the Blumentritt Road, Dimasalang St. and Aurora Boulevard and residents of Barangay 370 and
other downwind neighborhoods, as well as the Chinese General Hospital and Chinese General Hospital Colleges,
the group observed.
Based on the probe conducted by the EMB-NCR in response to the notification
made by the EcoWaste Coalition, the Manila North Cemetery Crematorium violated
Section 1, Rule X1X of RA 8749 for operating its cremation furnace without a
valid Permit to Operate and for its failure to submit self-monitoring reports
of its emission rates.
The facility also violated Section 2, Rule XXV for emitting black smoke
comparable to Shade No. 4 on the Ringelmann Chart, which is a scale used for
comparing the density of smoke rising from stacks.

The facility was also found to be in violation of Section 3, Chapter 3.3.3 of DENR  Administrative Order
2013-22 for failure to register as hazardous waste generator, and Section 11 of
DENR Administrative Order 2014-02 for failure to designate a Pollution Control
Officer and to apply for his/her accreditation.  
“Upgrading the Manila North Cemetery Crematorium and making it compliant
with the Clean Air Act will be consistent with Mayor Estrada’s desire to clean
up the capital.  The right to breathe clean air is a fundamental right
that must be protected,” the EcoWaste Coalition noted.  
Estrada last week said that he envisions a clean and orderly Manila to be his legacy when he retires from
public service.
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