Manila and Vancouver on opposite sides of the Pacific
The Canada–Philippines waste dispute was an international row over mislabeled Canadian garbage shipped to Manila by a recycling company. The 103 shipping containers that left from Vancouver in 2013–14 were labeled as recyclable plastics; they instead contained household waste.
The intricacies of international treaties, the private company involved, and Canadian regulations complicated the situation through 2019 when Philippine PresidentRodrigo Duterte began threatening Canada with ultimata. On May 30, 2019, 69 containers of Canadian trash were shipped back.
Chronic Plastics has been accused of violating the Basel Convention (on the Control of Transboundary Movements of Hazardous Wastes and Their Disposal); the Philippines and Canada are both signatories. While the treaty stipulates that "the exporting country must take back the waste materials if the receiving country refuses to accept them", Canada refused on the grounds that the garbage was municipal solid waste, not hazardous waste.[4] The Philippine Department of Environment and Natural Resources' Hazardous Waste Management Section Chief, Geri Geronimo Sañez, confirmed this saying, "It's a blue bin waste. [sic] That's paper, dry plastic generated from the kitchen. I have not seen any syringe, any diaper. It's not hazardous, but it's waste still". By November 2017, at least 26 of the containers' trash had been buried at a landfill in Capas, Tarlac.[5]
Repatriation
In 2016, a Philippine court ruled that the garbage should return to Canada.[3] That same year, Canadian environmental laws were changed to require companies such as Chronic Plastics to retrieve their trash.[6] At the 2017 summit for the Association of Southeast Asian Nations, Canadian Prime MinisterJustin Trudeau explained that Canadian laws and regulations had prohibited his nation from accepting the garbage, but that workarounds were in place, though the two nations had not yet settled on financial responsibilities.[5] As of November 13, 2018[update], storing the Canadian waste had cost approximately 36 million Philippine pesos (683,612 United States dollars).[4]
In an analysis of the situation in January 2019, Antonio La Viña said that there was nothing for the Philippines to do but wait on Canadian retrieval of the trash.[4] About three months later, in the wake of the 2019 Luzon earthquake, Philippine PresidentRodrigo Duterte lashed out at Canada over the garbage remaining in Manila. After accusing Canada of denigrating Filipinos, Duterte proclaimed that if the trash was not removed by Canada within a week (by April 30, 2019), the Philippines would declare war on Canada.[2] In response to Duterte's threat, the Canadian ambassador to the Philippines said, "I won't comment on the specific words of the president or his tone, but I will say this: Our prime minister committed and has recommitted to resolving this issue, including taking the waste back to Canada."[3]
On June 4, with the refuse matter considered settled, Philippine Executive SecretarySalvador Medialdea lifted Duterte's five-day bans on traveling to Canada and doing business with Canadian officials. By June 6 though, the Philippine ambassador to Canada had not yet returned.[13] Finally, on June 29, 2019, 69 containers of Chronic Plastics' wayward trash[14] arrived at the Roberts Bank Superport in Delta, British Columbia.[15]
^"Canada waste returns home after Philippines' war threat". Deutsche Welle. June 29, 2019. Archived from the original on July 26, 2019. Retrieved July 27, 2019. More than 60 containers full of garbage have returned to the western shores of Canada after being stranded for years in the Philippines. The matter had sparked a diplomatic row and prompted threats of an armed conflict.