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  • Sustainability

    Greenpeace to DENR: Implement pollution disclosure to save our rivers

    Manila—Environmental group Greenpeace today welcomed the Department of Environment and Natural Resources’ (DENR) recent moves to address water pollution in the Philippines but said that the government agency must do more to save the country’s polluted water bodies. Greenpeace said that the first step must be pollution disclosure, or mandatory reporting by factories about the…

    Greenpeace Philippines
  • Sustainability

    Philippine Seas in Crisis:

    Climate change, ocean pollution, and overfishing threaten the Philippines’ stature as the leader in global marine biodiversity, and are already affecting communities that rely on rich marine ecosystems for food.

    Greenpeace Philippines
  • Sustainability

    Plastic regulation: Its time has come

    Imagine this! According to the Asian Development Bank, in “The Garbage Book” published in 2004:

    Greenpeace Philippines
  • Sustainability

    Laguna Lake, The Philippines: Industrial Contamination Hotspots

    Contamination of natural water resources by discharges from the industrial sector in the Philippines continues to be a significant problem. In 2007, Greenpeace launched the Water Patrol to document the impact of water pollution on local communities in the Philippines. Within the framework of this project, several industrial sites located around Laguna Lake were visited…

    Greenpeace Philippines
  • Sustainability

    Marilao River is one of spotlight case studies in new Greenpeace report on Hidden Costs of Toxic Water Pollution

    The Marilao in Bulacan is among four iconic rivers whose polluted conditions are spotlighted in ‘Hidden Consequences’, a new report published today by Greenpeace. The report calls for urgent action to protect the livelihoods of the people and wildlife that depend on these waterways and the life-sustaining resources that they provide, by demanding that policy-makers…

    Greenpeace Philippines
  • Sustainability

    Philippine fishing companies included in Greenpeace shame list of pirate vessels

    An online database of fishing vessels involved in illegal, unreported and unregulated (IUU) fishing was launched by Greenpeace International this week (1). The Greenpeace IUU blacklist is the first fully public one-stop, independent record of fishing vessels, support vessels and companies involved in pirate fishing.

    Greenpeace Philippines
  • Sustainability

    Agrochemicals a major source of water pollution, Greenpeace says

    Decades of agrochemical use in the Philippines and Thailand has polluted water sources in the country and are directly posing risks to human health and the environment, Greenpeace said today at the launch of a new study entitled "Agrochemical use in the Philippines and its consequences to the environment." The environment group additionally called on…

    Greenpeace Philippines
  • Sustainability

    Chemical fertilizer use linked to climate change

    The use of chemical fertilizers is a significant source of greenhouse gas emissions and contributes greatly to climate change, Greenpeace said today during the Philippine launch of the report Cool Farming: Climate impacts of agriculture and mitigation potential.

    Greenpeace Philippines
  • Sustainability

    Waste survey exposes extent of plastic pollution in Manila Bay

    Following the arrival of the Greenpeace ship M.Y. Esperanza in Manila as part of the group's global expedition to defend the oceans, the ship’s crew and volunteers from Greenpeace and the Eco-Waste Coalition this morning collected approximately four cubic meters of plastic trash from Manila Bay onboard inflatable boats, as part of a waste survey…

    Greenpeace Philippines
  • Solar 1 Oil Spill - Philippines 2006. © Greenpeace / Gavin Newman
    Sustainability

    Greenpeace statement on the Guimaras oil spill incident

    The Philippine government must hold Petron and its partners accountable for damages to marine and coastal ecosystems and for their rehabilitation. The scale of this oil spill may turn to be even larger than the Semirara oil spill last year and threatens at least three marine reserves in Visayas.

    Greenpeace Philippines