The US government, through the US Agency for International Development (USAID)’s Clean Cities, Blue Ocean (CCBO) program, has awarded grants worth nearly PHP 42 million (USD 890,000) to five organizations in support of local solutions that address marine plastics pollution.
A staggering 2.7 million tons of plastic are generated in the Philippines each year, 20% of which is estimated to end up in the ocean, according to a 2015 McKinsey and Company study. Through these grants, USAID will partner with local and international organizations to test new models to increase recycling rates, reduce landfill waste and leakage into nearby waters, and improve community livelihoods to help build sustainable waste systems.
The first wave of grants will pilot solutions to stop the flow of plastic pollution to the waters within and surrounding the Philippines. Program grantees are:
- Communities Organized for Resource Allocation (CORA) for its project in Parañaque City
- Catholic Relief Services for its Manila City project
- Green Antz Builders, Inc. for a project in Pasig City
- The Plastics Credit Exchange for its project operating in the City of Manila; and
- Project Zacchaeus, undertaking an effort in Puerto Princesa, Palawan
The USAID CCBO program is working in several countries around the world, and in late 2019 launched its effort in the Philippines, where it aims to support the national government in advancing solid waste management. CCBO is currently operating at three engagement sites around the country to implement and test scalable waste and recycling solutions.
(Source: USAID)