Significant levels of toxic chemicals are contaminating
important water sources in the country, Greenpeace said in a recent press
conference, citing the report "Cutting Edge Contamination: A study of
environmental pollution during the manufacture of electronic products".
The report, a study of water samples taken from industrial
estates in the Philippines, Thailand, China, and Mexico, shows how a wide range
of hazardous chemicals used during electronics production have seeped into
rivers and underground water sources. One of the major findings is that among
the countries in the survey, levels of toxicity in Philippine water sources are
among the highest.
"In the past few years Greenpeace has raised the alarm on how
the use of hazardous chemicals and materials in electronic products has impacted
on human health and the environment when the product is disposed of or recycled.
This new report reveals that contamination arising even during the manufacture
of electronics is an issue of great concern," said Beau Baconguis, Greenpeace
Southeast Asia toxics campaigner. "The results exposed by this report are
worrying especially because we Filipinos rely heavily on groundwater for
drinking."
Analysis of groundwater samples taken within and around
Gateway Business Park in General Trias, ON Semiconductor in Carmona and Cavite
Export Processing Zone (CEPZA) in Rosario (all in Cavite), showed varying
degrees of contamination from different hazardous chemicals, including volatile
organic compounds (VOCs) and heavy metals. VOCs are known to affect the kidneys,
the central nervous system and the liver, and are potentially carcinogenic. All
sites notably contained chlorinated VOCs, toxic solvents or degreasers used in
"cleaning" semiconductors and other electrical equipment.
CEPZA, in particular, had unusually high levels of
contaminants. Three samples from this site contained chlorinated VOCs above
World Health Organization (WHO) limits for drinking water. One sample contained
tetrachloroethene at nine times above the WHO guidance values for exposure
limits, and 70 times the US Environmental Protection Agency maximum contaminant
level for drinking water. Elevated levels of metals, particularly copper, nickel
and zinc, were also found in groundwater samples in some sites. According to the
World Bank, 50 percent of the of the Philippine population rely on ground water
for drinking. Groundwater is also the source of 86 percent of piped water in the
country.
"The findings at this stage make it clear that only when we
factor in the complete life cycle of electronic products will their full
environmental costs emerge. Major electronic manufacturers must get their
suppliers to eliminate toxic chemicals from their production systems so that
communities will not have to suffer from consequences of unknowingly consuming
contaminated water," said Baconguis.
The electronics industry is truly global with individual
components manufactured at specialized facilities around the world often
involving highly resource and chemical intensive processes, generating
hazardous, wastes, the fate and effects of which are still very poorly
documented.
"The pollution must stop. Electronics manufacturing remains at the cutting
edge of technological development and has a strong economic future. There is no
reason why it should not also be at the cutting edge when it comes to clean
designs and technologies, substitution of hazardous chemicals, greater worker
health protection and the prevention of environmental pollution at source," she
added.