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Local governments outside the capital take measures vs Delta variant spread 

PEOPLE line up for vaccination on Aug. 2 at the Festive Walk Transport Hub 2 inside the Megaworld Business Park in Iloilo City. — @FESTIVEWALKILOILO

SEVERAL LOCAL governments across the country are taking various measures to prevent a surge in coronavirus cases amid the threat of the more transmissible Delta variant.  

In Iloilo City, the regional center of Western Visayas in central Philippines, Mayor Jerry. P. Treñas announced Monday morning that a “stricter lockdown” will be imposed this week to Sunday.    

“From Aug. 3 to 8, I will place the city on hard lockdown as protection for everyone here. Aklan and Cebu are both experiencing a surge; their hospitals are full with patients already being confined outside the facility. We don’t want the same scenario in Iloilo City,” he said in a statement.  

The city is already under the enhanced community quarantine from Aug. 1 to 7, the second strictest lockdown level.   

Non-essential establishments or those not related to food and medicine will be temporarily closed. A total liquor ban that prohibits sale and consumption of alcoholic drinks will be imposed, according to the statement.   

All inbound flights and sea travel will be suspended from Aug. 4 to 8, and all travelers will be banned during the five-day period.    

In Easter Visayas, the regional Health office is expanding contact tracing to the “third generation level” of the positive patient. It also asked local governments, through the barangay health emergency response teams, to ensure isolation in a facility or home quarantine for second and third generation contacts. 

Over the weekend, the regional office confirmed 10 Delta variant cases, which were all “considered to be local cases because there were no recorded travel history outside the region amongst them.”  

Zamboanga City, in the southwestern part of the country, has declared a no-movement day during the first three Sundays of the month despite being under the general community quarantine, the most relaxed lockdown level. The city also maintains the requirement of a negative RT-PCR test result for all inbound travelers.   

Baguio City, a popular tourist destination in northern Luzon, is banning non-essential travelers “regardless of place of origin” starting July 31.  

The local government, in a statement, said this will be in effect “tentatively” for one week. — MSJ 

Damage in infra, farm output from rains at P1.87B

BAGUIO PIO

THE GOVERNMENT has so far recorded P1.87 billion worth of damage to public structures and agricultural produce due to weeks of incessant rains brought by the southwest monsoon.   

The Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH) said Monday that the partial cost of damage to roads and flood-control structures has reached P1.17 billion.  

“As of 6:00 am Monday, Aug. 2, 2021, the DPWH Bureau of Maintenance reported that in Central Luzon alone, partial cost of damage to public infra is at P699.16 million from P349.96-million damage to roads and P301.20 million to flood-control,” the department said in a statement.  

It said the CALABARZON region — composed of Cavite, Laguna, Batangas, Rizal, and Quezon provinces — has the second highest cost of damage at P224.2 million from P222.62-million damage to roads and P1.60-million damage to flood-control structures.  

The Cordillera Administrative Region recorded a P113.51-million damage to roads.   

In MIMAROPA — Mindoro, Marinduque, Romblon, and Palawan — cost of damage reached P65 million with P5 million in roads and P60 million in flood-control structures.  

The DPWH also reported a P39.66-million cost of damage to roads in the National Capital Region, and P31.05-million damage to roads and flood-control structures in the Ilocos Region.  

The department said it has cleared 32 national roads in Luzon, but six roads remain closed to traffic, including four roads in Cordillera and two in Central Luzon “due to soil collapse and flooding.”  

AGRICULTURE
In the agriculture sector, losses rose to P698.53 million against the previous estimate of P615.72 million, according to the Department of Agriculture (DA).   

The DA’s Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Operations Center said in a bulletin on Monday that those affected include 26,994 farmers and 34,029 hectares of agricultural areas across the Cordillera Administrative Region, Ilocos, Central Luzon, CALABARZON, MIMAROPA, Bicol Region, and Western Visayas.  

Farm production losses reached 14,175 metric tons (MT). Affected commodities include rice, corn, high value crops, livestock and poultry, fisheries, and agri-infrastructure.  

Damage to rice totaled P586.01 million, with 11,918 MT of lost production volume and 31,900 hectares of affected agricultural areas.   

High value crops losses totaled P47.85 million. A total of 719 MT of production volume and 1,288 hectares of farmlands were affected.    

Losses to corn amounted to P37.57 million. 1,538 MT of production volume were damaged while 841 hectares of farm production areas were affected.    

Other subsectors that recorded losses include fisheries at P14.2 million, irrigation facilities at P9.53 million, and livestock and poultry at P3.37 million.    

The DA said it is conducting further assessment and validation of agricultural losses and is coordinating with other government agencies and local government units in providing assistance to affected farmers.   

“Based on reports (of the different regions), there are no reported damage on road networks and bridges that can affect accessibility and mobility of food supplies to date,” the DA said in the bulletin. — Arjay L. Balinbin and Revin Mikhael D. Ochave 

P46.9M worth of irrigation projects completed in Camariñes Sur  

IRRIGATION projects totaling P46.92 million were recently inaugurated in Camariñes Sur, the National Irrigation Administration (NIA) said.   

NIA, in a statement on Monday, said it launched on July 28 to 29 the following: P26.16 million Pump House and Farm Pond at Tigman-Hinagyanan-Inarihan River Irrigation System in the town of Calabanga; P14.08 million Punta Diamante Pump Irrigation System in the town of Canaman; and P6.69 million rehabilitated Taisan Communal Irrigation System Dam (Sibagat Small Reservoir Irrigation Project) in the town of Minalabac.    

The irrigation project in Calabanga will serve 1,363.12 hectares and benefit 2,245 farmers, while the Canaman project will serve 250 hectares tilled by 122 farmers.  

The Minalabac project will benefit 165 farmers covering 350 hectares of agricultural areas.  

Meanwhile, Camariñes Sur Rep. Luis Raymund F. Villafuerte, Jr. asked for NIA’s help on the completion of the Sustainable Bicol River Irrigation System.    

Mr. Villafuerte said more than 2,000 hectares of agricultural areas will be covered by the project.  

“Camariñes Sur is top five among rice producing provinces in the country despite having few irrigation systems since the majority of our lands are rain-fed. If the Sustainable Bicol River Irrigation System is finished, it could push the province into the top three major rice producers,” Mr. Villafuerte said.    

For his part, NIA Administrator Ricardo R. Visaya said 153 projects worth P11 billion were inaugurated in the last two months, while around 35 projects amounting to P2.7 billion will be launched this August.    

“NIA continues to develop and construct irrigation systems nationwide amidst the pandemic. The agency remains committed to its mandate of developing and maintaining irrigation systems in support of the agricultural program of the government most especially in this time of pandemic,” Mr. Visaya said. — Revin Mikhael D. Ochave  

Taiwanese, Korean fugitives arrested in the Philippines 

TWO FOREIGN fugitives, a Taiwanese and a Korean, both wanted in their respective countries for intimidation, fraud, and money laundering were arrested by Philippine immigration officers last week.   

In a news release on Sunday, the Bureau of Immigration (BI) reported the arrest last Wednesday of 53-year-old Korean national Yoo Moon Jong in Mabalacat City, Pampanga and 30-year-old Taiwanese Chen Yan Syun in Ermita, Manila.  

Mr. Yoo was convicted for swindling a fellow Korean of more than P2.6 million in 2007 and threatening to kill the victim upon learning that the latter had filed a case against him.    

Mr. Chen, according to Taiwanese authorities, is a member of a money laundering syndicate that preyed on victims in Taiwan.  

The two are temporarily held at the BI’s detention facility in Camp Bagong Diwa, Taguig while waiting to be deported.   

Mr. Morente said the two fugitives have been blacklisted in the Philippines to prevent them from re-entering the country.   

“As we have repeatedly warned these wanted (foreigners), do not use the Philippines because we will never allow our country to become a haven for fugitives,” he added. — Bianca Angelica D. Añago  

No delay expected in 2022 budget submission despite secretary’s leave 

SENATE.GOV.PH

THE DEPARTMENT of Budget and Management (DBM) is expected to submit the government’s 2022 spending plan as scheduled on or before August 25 even with Secretary Wendel E. Avisado’s sick leave, according to a lawmaker. 

Senator Panfilo M. Lacson Sr., in a statement, said no delays are seen in the transmittal of the 2022 National Expenditure Program (NEP) as online communication with the Budget chief is possible.    

“Even with the physical absence of Secretary Wendel Avisado, the Department of Budget and Management has an abundance of competent and capable career undersecretaries and assistant secretaries who can avail of existing telecommunication technology for his guidance and direction,” said Mr. Lacson, vice chair of the Senate Finance Committee.  

“I thus cannot see any reason for the delay in the constitutionally mandated 30-day period submission of the National Expenditure Program to Congress, after President Rodrigo Duterte’s State of the Nation Address last July 26,” he said.  

DBM announced Saturday that Mr. Avisado will be on medical leave from August 2 to 13 following his recent bout with coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19). Budget Undersecretary Tina Rose Marie L. Canada will be temporarily in charge of the department.  

Mr. Lacson said he also sees no impediment to holding simultaneous public hearings on the budget in the House of Representatives’ Appropriations Committee and the Senate Finance Committee. — Alyssa Nicole O. Tan 

Labor chief presses PHL gov’t to swiftly ratify ILO charter changes  

PHILIPPINE STAR/KRIZ JOHN ROSALES

LABOR Secretary Silvestre H. Bello III called on the Philippine government to fast-track the ratification of the 1986 instrument that amends the constitution of the International Labor Organization (ILO), which he currently chairs.   

Mr. Bello said the Philippines must take the lead in approving the instrument that will give speaking and voting rights to more state members of the ILO governing body.   

“I am convinced that the Philippines’ non-ratification is just a case of oversight rather than a deliberate rejection of the Amendment,” Mr. Bello said in a statement on Sunday.   

He added that the Philippines has accepted and ratified many other key ILO conventions in the recent years, “this is why I believe our government can act swiftly on it.”   

In a press conference last July 10, Philippine Labor attaché to Geneva Cheryl D. Yañgot, where the headquarters of the ILO is located, said the Labor department had already coordinated with the Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA) on the country’s ratification of the amendment.   

Under Executive Order 459, the DFA serves as the lead agency in guiding the president in such ratifications, which is subject to the Senate’s concurrence.   

Mr. Bello assumed the top position in the organization that sets the global labor standards in July 2021.   

He said one of his top priorities during his one-year term is to a push for the amendment that will increase the voting membership in the ILO and abolish the “seeming permanent status of 10 members of chief industrial countries” to take effect.   

At present, out of 187 member states of the ILO, only 28 have voting and speaking rights, another 28 have only speaking rights, and the rest “are mere observers with neither voting and speaking rights, including the Philippines.” — Bianca Angelica D. Añago 

Bureau of Customs beats July revenue target

BW FILE PHOTO

THE BUREAU of Customs (BoC) collected P58.183 billion in duties and taxes in July, exceeding a monthly target once again on improving imports, it said in a statement Monday.

Last month’s performance exceeded the P53.751-billion target set for the month by 8.2%. It also beat the P49.82 billion year-earlier total by 16.8% and the P52.17 billion collected in June by 11.5%.

The BoC said 14 of its 17 collection offices met their targets — Aparri, Batangas, Cagayan De Oro, Clark, Legaspi, Limay, Davao, Manila, Ninoy Aquino International Airport, San Fernando, Subic, Surigao, Tacloban and Zamboanga.

In the year to date, the bureau collected P359.93 billion, or 4.15% ahead of the target pace for the seven months to July and also 4.2% more than the year-earlier total.

“The bureau continues to prove the intensified collective efforts of all ports this year, not to mention, the improvement of volume of imports while maintaining border security and facilitating trade,” the BoC said.

The seven-month total accounted for 58% of its P620-billion target for 2021.

At the 117th anniversary celebration of Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR) Monday, Finance Secretary Carlos G. Dominguez III stressed the need for tax-collecting agencies to meet or exceed, their revenue goals to support the government at a time of increased spending for the pandemic.

Mr. Dominguez challenged the BIR to exceed its P2.081-trillion target for the year to help ensure the economy recovers.

“This is my marching order to the men and women of the BIR: go for the gold. I urge the agency to not just meet, but exceed its collection targets this year and beyond,” he said in his speech.

“There is no room for our revenue efforts to fail. To win this battle for our economic recovery, everything depends on the bureau’s success in raising much-needed revenue,” he added.

The BIR collected P1.034 trillion in the first half, beating its P1.018-trillion target for the period by 1.61%.

The government budget this year is P4.5 trillion, with P2.88 trillion to be funded via revenue from tax and other sources. The remainder will raised through debt.

Tax collections fell last year after the pandemic weakened consumption during an economic downturn. — Beatrice M. Laforga

Port authority tightens border controls to keep Delta coronavirus from spreading

THE PHILIPPINE Ports Authority (PPA) said it has imposed stricter border-control measures at all ports to contain the spread of the Delta variant of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19).

In a memorandum dated July 30 and signed by PPA General Manager Jay Daniel R. Santiago, the agency said it will strictly enforce regulations regarding the notice of arrival for vessels as well as applications for berthing or anchorage.

The notice of arrival should be submitted at least 48 hours prior to arrival or before any delivery of cargo inside the port for loading, the agency said in a statement.

The notice of arrival may also include a crew list with detailed information about the persons on board, it added.

As for berthing or anchorage, the agency said the application should be submitted at least 24 hours for vessels on scheduled runs and 36 hours for tramping vessels.

“Coordination shall be made, as applicable, with the Bureau of Customs, Bureau of Immigration, Bureau of Quarantine, and Philippine Coast Guard on matters affecting border protocols,” according to the memorandum.

“Crew change or disembarkation shall continue to be done only at PPA ports identified as crew change hubs.”

The PPA also said there will be no boarding by pilots until submission of “free pratique” and clearance by the Bureau of Quarantine or Department of Health boarding team.

The memorandum was addressed to port managers, terminal operators and cargo handling operators, shipping lines and shipping agents, and pilots and pilotage associations.

The Ports authority said its directives are in accordance with the July 29 resolution of the Inter-Agency Task Force for the Management of Emerging Infectious Diseases or IATF.  — Arjay L. Balinbin

Measure signed creating energy research institute

PHILSTAR

PRESIDENT RODRIGO R. Duterte last week signed into law a measure establishing an energy research institute of experts and researchers from both the private and public sectors, the Palace said. 

Mr. Duterte signed Republic Act No. 11572, which establishes the Philippine Energy Research and Policy Institute, his spokesman Herminio L. Roque, Jr. said at a televised news briefing Monday.

The law enables the institute, an independent agency attached to the University of the Philippines, to study issues and challenges in the energy sector, “including the environment, health, and consumer impacts of energy policies and programs.”

The institute is to collaborate with government agencies, academic institutions, and other stakeholders while remaining independent and ensuring that its research remains uninfluenced by political affiliation, technological bias, “or other presuppositions.”

The law tasks the body to conduct energy-related research and development programs and capacity-building training, with special attention given to the needs of the Department of Energy, the Energy Regulatory Commission, and the legislature.

The institute is to be headed by an executive director, reporting to an executive board composed of seven members with the UP president as ex-officio chairperson, “and at least one representative from the fields of engineering, law, science, statistics, economics, social science, and public health.”

“A Special Account in the General Fund for energy research, which shall be maintained and managed by the Bureau of Treasury, shall be established to support the research undertaken by the Institute,” according to the law.

The law appropriates P200 million for the initial operating funds of the institute.

“Government agencies concerned are hereby authorized to include in their respective annual budget such necessary amounts as their contribution to the funding of certain research activities of the Institute,” it said. — Kyle Aristophere T. Atienza

IPOPHL adopts EU goods and services trademark classification system

THE INTELLECTUAL Property Office of the Philippines (IPOPHL) said it is adopting the European Union’s (EU) goods and services trademark classification system to improve the business trademark application process in the Philippines.

The agency in a statement Monday said that the database contains 78,000 terms describing the nature of a good or service, which is part of the trademark application process. All terms in the database are automatically accepted by the IPOPHL and all trademark offices in the EU.

“This will set the limits of the trademark protection sought for and help IP offices determine whether a mark is confusingly similar to another, a conflict which is grounds for rejection,” IPOPHL said.

The database also integrates the most updated version of an international trademark classification system called the Nice classification to align the local system with global trademark filing.

The adoption of the database will make the process smoother for businesses filing at intellectual property offices in the EU, or ease the process for foreign applicants filing in the Philippines, IPOPHL Director General Rowel S. Barba said.

“This will eliminate the risk of being objected to or the application getting delayed over classification or description errors… which… would mean paying for a new application and waiting longer for a decision,” he said.

“For EU businesses, this greater harmonization between IPOPHL and EU-based IP offices can bring ease in trademark protection, possibly motivating them to set up more shops in or introduce more brands to the Philippines through export.”

The database expansion, he added, will help those that have registered marks to monitor whether their trademarks are being infringed.

IPOPHL is the 17th intellectual property office outside of the EU to use the database. — Jenina P. Ibañez

The Recycling Myth: Big Oil’s solution for plastic waste littered with failure 

REUTERS

BOISE, Idaho — In early 2018, residents of Boise, Idaho were told by city officials that a breakthrough technology could transform their hard-to-recycle plastic waste into low-polluting fuel. The program, backed by Dow, Inc., one of the world’s biggest plastics producers, was hailed locally as a greener alternative to burying it in the county landfill.

A few months later, residents of Boise and its suburbs began stuffing their yogurt containers, cereal-box liners and other plastic waste into special orange garbage bags, which were then trucked more than 300 miles (483 kilometers) away, across the state line to Salt Lake City, Utah.

The destination was a company called Renewlogy. The startup marketed itself as an “advanced recycling” company capable of handling hard-to-recycle plastics such as plastic bags or takeout containers — stuff most traditional recyclers won’t touch. Renewlogy’s technology, company founder Priyanka Bakaya told local media at the time, would heat plastic in a special oxygen-starved chamber, transforming the trash into diesel fuel.

Within a year, however, that effort ground to a halt. The project’s failure, detailed for the first time by Reuters, shows the enormous obstacles confronting advanced recycling, a set of reprocessing technologies that the plastics industry is touting as an environmental savior — and sees as key to its own continued growth amid mounting global pressure to curb the use of plastic.

Renewlogy’s equipment could not process plastic “films” such as cling wrap, as promised, Boise’s Materials Management Program Manager Peter McCullough told Reuters. The city remains in the recycling program, he said, but its plastic now meets a low-tech end: It’s being trucked to a cement plant northeast of Salt Lake City that burns it for fuel.

Renewlogy said in an e-mailed response to Reuters’ questions that it could recycle plastic films. The trouble, it said, was that Boise’s waste was contaminated with other garbage at 10 times the level it was told to expect.

Boise spokesperson Colin Hickman said the city was not aware of any statements or assurances made to Renewlogy about specific levels of contamination.

Hefty EnergyBag, as the recycling program in Boise is known, is a collaboration between Dow and US packaging firm Reynolds Consumer Products, Inc., maker of the program’s orange garbage sacks and popular household goods such as Hefty trash bags, plastic food wrap and aluminum foil. Hefty EnergyBag said in an e-mailed response to questions that it “continues to work with companies to help advance technologies that enable other end uses for the collected plastics.” It declined to answer questions about Renewlogy’s operations, as did Dow spokesperson Kyle Bandlow. Reynolds did not respond to requests for comment.

The collapse of Boise’s advanced recycling plan is not an isolated case. In the past two years, Reuters has learned, three separate advanced recycling projects backed by other major companies — in the Netherlands, Indonesia and the United States — have been dropped or indefinitely delayed because they were not commercially viable.

In all, Reuters examined 30 projects by two-dozen advanced recycling companies across three continents and interviewed more than 40 people with direct knowledge of this industry, including plastics industry officials, recycling executives, scientists, policymakers and analysts.

Most of those endeavors are agreements between small advanced recycling firms and big oil and chemical companies or consumer brands, including ExxonMobil Corp., Royal Dutch Shell Plc and Procter & Gamble Co. (P&G). All are still operating on a modest scale or have closed down, and more than half are years behind schedule on previously announced commercial plans, according to the Reuters review. Three advanced recycling companies that have gone public in the last year have seen their stock prices decline since their market debuts.

PLASTIC BOOM
Many advanced recycling projects have emerged in recent years in response to a global explosion of plastic waste. More than 90% gets dumped or incinerated because there’s no cheap way to repurpose it, according to a landmark 2017 study published in the journal Science Advances.

Not only is this garbage choking landfills and despoiling oceans, it’s contributing to global warming because it’s made from fossil fuels https://www.reuters.com/investigates/special-report/health-coronavirus-plastic-recycling. At a time when demand for transport fuel is under pressure from government vehicle-efficiency mandates and the rise of electric cars, the oil industry is doubling down on plastics. Plastic production — which industry analysts forecast to double by 2040 — will be the biggest growth market for oil demand over the next decade, according to the Paris-based International Energy Agency.

A number of US and European cities have already levied bans or consumer fees on single-use plastic bags. Pressure is also building for “polluter-pays” laws that would shift the cost of waste collection from taxpayers to the companies that make and use plastic. Earlier this month, Maine became the first US state to pass such legislation.

Enter advanced recycling. Also known as “chemical recycling,” advanced recycling is an umbrella term for processes that use heat or chemicals to turn plastic waste into fuel or reclaimed resin to make new plastic.

The American Chemistry Council (ACC), an industry group whose membership is dominated by plastics makers, says polluter-pays measures would hurt the economy. It’s urging US lawmakers instead to ease regulations on and provide incentives to advanced recycling companies.

As of July, 14 US states had passed these kinds of laws. At least $500 million in public funds has been spent since 2017 on 51 US advanced recycling projects, the environmental group Greenpeace said in a report last year. Boise’s government, for example, has spent at least $736,000 on garbage bags for its program, according to purchase orders and invoices between May 2018 and April 2020 obtained by Reuters through public records requests.

The ACC says these technologies are game-changers because they could potentially process all types of plastic, eliminating expensive sorting and cleaning.

“The potential is enormous,” said Joshua Baca, vice-president of the ACC’s plastics division. The ACC this month called on Congress to develop a national strategy to reduce plastic waste, including “rapid scaling” of advanced recycling.

However, the Reuters review found some advanced recycling companies struggling with the same obstacles that have bedeviled traditional recyclers for decades: the expense of collecting, sorting and cleaning plastic trash, and creating end products that can compete on price and quality with fossil fuels or virgin plastic.

Transitioning from the lab to the real-world chaos of dirty and improperly sorted household plastic waste has proven too much for some of these newcomers, said Helen McGeough, a London-based senior plastic recycling analyst at Independent Commodity Intelligence Services, a data and analytics firm.

“People have entered into this, perhaps not understanding the processes properly, the waste that they are handling, and so that’s why some things have failed,” McGeough told Reuters.

Advanced recycling is in its infancy, and as with any emerging technology, setbacks are to be expected, a dozen industry players said.

So far, some of their own research shows it’s no panacea.

An assessment of the Hefty EnergyBag program was commissioned by Reynolds. It compared the environmental impact of recycling plastic waste through a heating process known as pyrolysis — the approach Renewlogy used — to two traditional ways of handling it: burning it in cement kilns or putting it in a landfill.

The study, published on the Hefty EnergyBag program’s website last year, found that in Boise’s case, pyrolysis fared worst among the three in terms of its overall global warming potential. That measure estimated the greenhouse gas emissions of the whole process, from manufacturing the garbage bags and transporting the waste to the energy used in the recycling process.

A narrower analysis, looking just at the final recycling process and its contribution to global warming, found that pyrolysis scored better than landfilling but was worse than burning plastic in a cement kiln.

“These types of studies will really push the chemical recyclers to think about their operations,” said Tad Radzinski, president of Sustainable Solutions Corporation, the consultancy which conducted the study.

The study noted its calculations came from various sources, including a US-based pyrolysis plant that has experience processing the Hefty EnergyBag materials. Asked whether Renewlogy’s plant was the one it examined, Sustainable Solutions said it could not name the plant because of a non-disclosure agreement with that facility.

Reynolds and Dow had no comment about the study.

Renewlogy said it supplied no data to Sustainable Solutions. “Our numbers are vastly different from those used in the report,” Renewlogy said in response to Reuters’ questions.

CASHING IN ON TRASH
Advanced recycling projects have mushroomed globally, especially since 2018. That’s when China, once the top buyer of the world’s used plastic, banned these imports because its recyclers were overwhelmed. Other countries, too, are shutting their doors to foreign waste, putting pressure on the developed world to deal with its own garbage.

The boom is also being fueled by investors looking for the next hot green-tech industry.

Most of the advanced recycling firms involved in the projects reviewed by Reuters use a form of pyrolysis, the process of breaking down matter using high temperatures in an environment with little or no oxygen.

Pyrolysis has been tried before on plastic. British oil giant BP Plc, German chemical maker BASF SE and US oil company Texaco, Inc. — now owned by Chevron Corp. — all separately dropped plans to scale up waste-to-fuel pyrolysis technologies more than 20 years ago due to technical and commercial problems.

BASF said it now believes such an endeavor is viable. It said in October 2019 it invested 20 million euros in Quantafuel <QFUEL-ME.OL>, a Norway-based plastic-to-fuel company listed on the Oslo Stock Exchange.

Some scientists challenge the assertion that melting unsorted plastic made from a variety of chemicals is good for the environment.

In addition to consuming large amounts of energy, “pyrolysis can generate toxic waste, such as dioxins,” said Hideshige Takada, a geochemist and professor at the Tokyo University of Agriculture and Technology who has studied pollutants in waste for decades.

Nor has pyrolysis proven capable of transforming unsorted garbage into high-quality fuel and clean plastic resin, says Susannah Scott, a chemistry professor at the University of California, Santa Barbara, who receives funding from the plastics industry to perform recycling research.

Plastics have long been stamped with the numbers 1 to 7 inside the familiar “chasing arrows” logo to help traditional recyclers separate the waste before processing it.

Scott said melting different numbered plastics together through pyrolysis produces a complex blend of hydrocarbons that must then be separated and purified for reuse. That process requires a lot of energy, she said, and typically yields products that don’t measure up to the quality of the original material.

With pyrolysis, “the value of what you’re making is so low,” Scott said.

Advanced recyclers say they’re overcoming these problems with innovations in energy efficiency and purification.

Of two-dozen companies whose projects were reviewed by Reuters, three have gone public in the last year: PureCycle Technologies, Inc., Agilyx AS <AGLX-ME.OL> and Pryme B.V. <PRYME-ME.OL>. The market value of all has declined since their debuts.

One of the hardest hit has been PureCycle, a Florida-headquartered advanced recycling startup that went public this year through a special purchase acquisition company. It ended its first day of trading on March 18 with shares up 13% to $33, giving it a market capitalization of around $3.8 billion.

But its shares tumbled 40% on May 6, the day short-seller Hindenburg Research published a report calling the recycler’s technology “unproven” and its financial projections “ridiculous.” PureCycle shares have since regained some ground.

PureCycle said the same day that Hindenburg’s report was “designed to drive down the stock price in order to serve the short seller’s economic interests.” It declined further comment about the report.

Hindenburg declined to comment.

According to its website, PureCycle uses a “ground-breaking” recycling process developed by P&G, maker of Gillette razors and Head & Shoulders shampoo, to turn a particular type of waste plastic, polypropylene, back into resin. PureCycle is around two years behind schedule on its first commercial plant, which its CEO Mike Otworth told Reuters on March 6 was due to slower-than-expected debt financing and the coronavirus pandemic.

P&G declined to comment.

The ACC, the chemicals trade group, continues to promote the potential of advanced recycling. Last year, it spent $14 million lobbying members of Congress on various issues, the most the organization has ever spent, according to OpenSecrets.org, a non-profit initiative that tracks money in US politics.

Until her two-year term ended in December, Renewlogy’s Bakaya was the chair of the ACC’s advanced recycling unit.

ONE TO WATCH
Bakaya grew up in Australia after her father emigrated there from India, she told business podcast Upside in 2020. She attended Stanford University and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), graduating from the latter in 2011. She became a prominent figure in advanced recycling, promoting her technology on media forums such as National Geographic and the BBC.

Bakaya garnered a string of accolades, including making Fortune’s “40 under 40: Ones to Watch” list in 2013.

She declined to be interviewed for this story.

Bakaya said in a TEDx talk in 2015 that she initially set up a company called PK Clean to recover oil from “mixed, dirty landfill-bound plastic.” PK Clean later changed its name to Renewlogy, Bakaya said in an interview with MIT in 2017.

Steve Case, co-founder and former chief executive of AOL, Inc., invested $100,000 in PK Clean in 2016, according to a blog he authored on the website of his venture capital firm Revolution. The governor’s office in Utah said it gave a total of $200,000 in grants in 2016 and 2017, while Salt Lake City’s Department of Economic Development provided $350,000 in loans in 2015 to PK Clean, according to Peter Makowski, acting director of business development for the department.

Revolution did not respond to requests for comment. The Utah governor’s office said the program under which PK Clean received the grants had ended and it was no longer funding the company. Salt Lake City said its loans to PK Clean have been repaid.

Boise first sent plastic waste to Renewlogy in June 2018, followed by at least five more truckloads in the following months, minutes of meetings of Boise’s Public Works Commission show. In June 2019, Boise said in a statement it had temporarily stopped sending its waste to Renewlogy while the Utah plant upgraded its equipment. Hefty EnergyBag said Renewlogy left the program for good in December 2020. Renewlogy did not respond to questions about how much of Boise’s plastic waste it had recycled.

Reuters made an unannounced visit to Renewlogy’s Salt Lake City operation in mid-May. On a Monday afternoon, there was little visible activity outside the facility; the front parking lot contained five passenger cars, two of which had flat tires. The back lot contained dozens of bales of plastic waste dotted with faded orange recycling bags stacked next to rusty oil drums and a wheelbarrow full of glass jars containing a murky liquid.

Renewlogy co-founder Benjamin Coates emerged from the building to speak to a reporter. Asked about the status of the company, Coates said opponents of chemical recycling were trying to damage the industry by pushing “conspiracy theories” about the technology. He directed further questions to Bakaya before telling Reuters to leave the premises.

Jeremiah Bates, owner of a tire shop next door to Renewlogy, said the recycling plant didn’t appear to have been active for at least six months and that he had complained to Coates and the local fire marshal about the debris piling up out back.

Renewlogy did not respond to questions about Bates’ assertions.

An inspector from the Salt Lake City Fire Prevention Bureau, Jose Vila Trejo, visited the recycling facility on Feb. 12, according to his inspection report. Vila Trejo told Reuters that his tour of the plant turned up no fire hazard because there were no machines present that could generate heat, flames or sparks.

“They were basically shut down,” Vila Trejo said. “There was no equipment in there.”

Renewlogy confirmed to Reuters that Vila Trejo inspected the building in February. It said the facility had not shut down and that there was equipment at the site.

Renewlogy said it shares the Salt Lake City premises with other companies that work on pyrolysis of wood and other waste, and that much of the junk Reuters saw on the back lot belonged to other firms that it declined to name. Renewlogy added that it continues to operate its plant as a testing facility to develop new plastic recycling technologies.

Reuters exclusively reported in January that an advanced plastic recycling project in India, which was a collaboration between Renewlogy and a charity funded by plastic makers, collapsed last year.

Renewlogy later this year plans to launch another plastics recycling facility, this one in Phoenix, Arizona, according to its website. Joe Giudice, assistant public works director at the City of Phoenix, confirmed the facility was due to start being set up in August. More taxpayer money is due to flow to the company.

The Arizona Innovation Challenge, a state-funded program, in 2017 awarded Renewlogy a $250,000 grant, funds that will be dispersed when Renewlogy sets up in Phoenix, the Arizona Commerce Authority, which runs the program, told Reuters.

Giudice said Phoenix would not be sending Renewlogy any film plastics due to uncertainty over whether they could be easily recycled.

Renewlogy said it would be “starting very small” and would be “validating each step before scaling up.”

BOUND FOR THE DEVIL’S SLIDE
Back in Boise, the Hefty EnergyBag program continues, but Renewlogy is no longer involved. Waste in those orange Hefty bags now helps fuel the Devil’s Slide, a cement plant in Morgan, Utah, part of the US unit of Holcim, a European multinational firm. The company told Reuters it has been burning Boise’s plastic since March 2020 as a replacement for coal.

Hefty EnergyBag has forged similar arrangements with cement makers in Nebraska and Georgia, according to the environmental study of the program commissioned by Reynolds.

Environmental groups tracking chemical pollutants say incinerating plastic this way produces significant carbon emissions and releases dioxins associated with the chemicals in the plastic. This is in no way “recycling,” said Lee Bell, advisor to the International Pollutants Elimination Network (IPEN), a global network of public interest groups working to eliminate toxic pollutants.

Bandlow, the Dow spokesperson, said the Hefty EnergyBag program was helping to “transform waste into valuable products.” He declined to respond to questions about the environmental impact of burning plastic in cement kilns.

Jocelyn Gerst, a spokesperson for Holcim’s US operations, said the emissions levels of the plastic waste it burns are “the same or lower than traditional fuel,” and that it had a state permit to incinerate plastic. The US Environmental Protection Agency said it does not have any data to show that “substitution of plastic waste for coal makes a significant difference in air emissions.”

Back in Idaho, Anne Baxter Terribilini, a resident of Meridian, a Boise suburb, said she initially was eager to participate in the Hefty EnergyBag program, but was disillusioned to learn that her plastic waste now ends up in a cement kiln.

“I hate to feel like we are being lulled into complacency, believing that we are having a positive impact on the environment, when really we aren’t,” she said.

Boise officials said they’ve been transparent with the public about the handling of their plastic waste. Haley Falconer, Boise’s sustainability officer, said the city has learned from the setbacks. In hindsight, she said, it would have been better to build a customized recycling program with a local partner so that Boise could control where its waste was going.

But the city has no place else to put its plastic garbage, so it’s sticking with the Hefty EnergyBag program, Boise’s McCullough said.— Reuters

Food security NGO calls for more ecozones focused on fisheries 

THE NATIONAL and local governments need to collaborate with industry to establish economic zones dedicated to fisheries, food security advocacy group Tugon Kabuhayan said.

Tugon Kabuhayan convener Asis G. Perez said in a virtual briefing Monday that producers also need facilities that will support production and postharvest operations.

“With government support and provision of fiscal incentives, the fisheries and aquaculture industry can generate more jobs. We are ready to venture in the promotion of consumption of processed commodities both domestically and internationally,” Mr. Perez said.

Mr. Perez said there are 379 operating economic zones, 22 of which are agro-industrial, citing Philippine Economic Zone Authority (PEZA) data.

Incentives are authorized by Republic Act No. 7916 or the Special Economic Zone Act of 1995 for ecozone locators.

Incentives include exemption from national and local taxes on their imports, tax credits for import substitution, income tax holidays, and tax-free imports of capital equipment, construction materials, specialized office equipment and vehicles, and professional instruments.

Mr. Perez said of the 22 agro-industrial zones, only those run by Shemberg Biotech Corp. and Alsons Aquaculture Corp. deal with fisheries.

Shemberg is engaged in seaweed processing while Alsons units manufacture feed and grow fish, shrimp and other aquaculture species for export.

“Despite these incentives, the uptake for locating or establishing export processing zone for aquaculture and fisheries appears to be limited,” Mr. Perez said.

“While tuna, seaweed and shrimp remain the country’s top (fisheries) export commodities, accounting for 63% or 153,667 metric tons (MT) of total volume and 58% or $531.33 million (by) value… no tuna or shrimp-related industry is PEZA registered,” he added.

Tugon Kabuhayan said the Philippines can become a dominant exporter while still bringing economic growth to local communities.

It said producers are ready to venture into promoting the consumption of processed commodities in all markets.

“This will definitely contribute to more job creation. In our estimate, even if only half of the urban population patronizes deboned milkfish (bangus), this will create additional 7,000 jobs in a year. What more if we sell deboned bangus and other value-added aquaculture products to other countries?” it said.

The Department of Agriculture (DA) and PEZA signed a memorandum of agreement in 2019 to industrialize agribusiness and promote domestic production, manufacturing and exports, and to lower import dependence.

“Both DA and PEZA recognize the need for cooperative effort in promoting and supporting investment in agricultural-oriented activities through the granting of fiscal and non-fiscal incentives and development of agro-industrial, aquamarine, and agro-forestry special ecozones,” Agriculture Secretary William D. Dar said at the time. — Revin Mikhael D. Ochave