Pacific Island Times Vol 3 No 8 August 2019 | Page 4
FROM THE PUBLISHER’S DESK
Plastic straws and
other rubbish
A
swag bag given away at last
month’s Pacific Island Envi-
ronmental Conference con-
tained a slender woven pouch made
of tikog leaves. As I am drawn to or-
ganic knickknacks, I mentally labeled
the pouch “to keep.” In-
side this “to keep” pouch
is a pair of metallic blue
stainless-steel hollow
rods of different sizes,
each has a tiny brush.
“They are reusable
straws,” one of the event
organizers offered to help
me figure it out when she
noticed I was examining
the alien objects like a
curious caveman. “You
can clean them with the
brushes.”
Ohhh.
I guess my delayed cognizant
of the function of those rods came
from the fact that I don’t usually sip
a drink with a straw even at restau-
rants. I drink straight from the glass
or fast-food soda cup. Not virtue
signaling; I just didn’t develop the
straw-sipping habit. So the thought
of owning my own personal reusable
drinking straws is quite alien to me.
Those rods, I mentally labeled “to
give away”— if there would be any
taker. However, I don’t know anyone
who drinks with a straw at home.
And I wonder if anyone would leave
their home with a conscious decision
to bring a metal straw with them in
case they happen to dine at a restau-
rant or stop by McDonald’s.
By 2020, plastic shopping bags will
be banned on Guam. For environ-
mental activists, plastic straw is the
new demon. In the last few months,
4
a number of cities in the states have
banned plastic straws. The goal is
to cut down on plastic litter ending
up in the ocean. It’s only a matter
of time before the Guam legislature
jumps on the bandwagon.
I get it. The world,
terrorized by the horror
of climate change, is in a
hurry to hit the zero waste
goal— a resource-recov-
ery rate of 100 percent.
“Yesterday was the dead-
line for the global zero
waste goal,” one of the
resource speakers at PIEC
said. Realistically, we’re
a long way from that.
Focusing on plas-
tic straws is a myopic
approach to hitting this goal on time.
Let’s analyze our own household data
to identify the main waste-cutting
opportunities. Straws fill up –if at
all—.0000001 percent of our garbage
bins. The bigger problems don’t even
fit in our rubbish cans — detergent
and coffee containers, sauce jars,
wine bottles, takeout styro boxes and
what have you.
Guam consumers don’t have much
choice. Most products available to
us are packaged in these ecologically
unfriendly containers. The zero waste
movement requires the cooperation
of corporate giants. For now, we,
local consumers, are in a bind.
I consider myself an environmen-
tally conscious citizen. I recycle and
upcycle. But to be realistic, how
much more recyclables and upcycla-
bles can I hoard in my tiny apart-
ment?
On Guam, recycling can be more
challenging. No one even knows
whatever happened to Guam’s bottle
rebate law. And due to a lack of
recycling facilities for most nonbio-
degradable consumer leftovers on
Guam, a huge volume of them end up
in the landfill, which is now about to
reach its full capacity. About 42,000
tons of recyclables, including broken
household items and appliances, are
collected every year on Guam, and
China’s new policy against taking
other countries’ rubbish causes anx-
iety, not just to recycling businesses
but to solid waste managers as well.
In other words, managing consum-
er products that are much bigger than
straws demands more attention.
Zero-waste is a compelling idea.
But let’s face it: it is a complex goal,
considering the many hurdles.
Just the same, “it’s important to set
a zero-waste goal,” environmentalist
Bob Graves writes, quoting Jared
Blumenfeld, the U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency’s Region 9 admin-
istrator. Setting such a goal, “gets you
on the road to designing a zero-waste
system.” As that process proceeds,
Blumenfeld says, “you’ll engage in
waste-characterization studies and
find lots of things that don’t need to
go into landfills.”
Graves noted that local communi-
ties sit at the end of the waste stream.
“The more effectively they act, the
less goes to waste,” writes Graves,
associate director of Governing Insti-
tute, the designate content curator for
the FutureStructure initiative. “But
the local recovery system is part of
the much larger materials system,
and it’s going to take an integrated
policy and regulatory framework by
government at all levels to create true
pathways to zero waste.”
Publisher/Editor-in-Chief
Mar-Vic Cagurangan
[email protected]
Contributing Writers
Raquel Bagnol
Michael Castro
Zaldy Dandan
Jayne Flores
Jeni Ann Flores
Ken Leon Guerrero
Theodore Lewis
Jeffrey Marschessault
Diana Mendoza
Jonathan Perez
Alex Rhowuniong
Johanna Salinas
Visual Editor
Mar-Vic Cagurangan
Sales and Marketing Executive
Jan SN Furukawa
[email protected]
Account Executive
Anna Marie Alegre
[email protected]
Administrative Assistant
Lolita Therrel
[email protected]
***
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