Filed under: Call To Action, No Plastic, Water | Tags: calamba, greenpeace, laguna lake, plastic, trash, volunteer, waste, Water, world coastal cleanup day, youth
I have lived beside the Laguna Lake for more than 10 years now and so this news really hits home for me. I’d like to direct our attention to this big benevolent lake that is now turning toxic and needs our urgent protection.
Here’s a direct news from Greenpeace Philippines…

Two youths assist during a waste survey of rubbish taken from Laguna Lake. Greenpeace Water Patrol volunteers and students from Laguna Province lead a clean up of floating trash in and around Laguna de Bay, 54 kilometers south of Manila, on World Coastal Clean Up Day today, September 20, 2008. ©Greenpeace
“Laguna de Bay is perhaps the country’s most important freshwater body and should be protected to meet the needs of future generations. Besides the visible garbage and rubbish from our daily lives that is indiscriminately dumped here, Laguna lake is also under severe threat from less visible but more dangerous toxic pollutants from the industrial sector,” said Beau Baconguis, Campaign Manager, Greenpeace Southeast Asia. “Increasing demand combined with the vagaries of hydrological patterns due to climate change a global fresh water crisis is looming ahead of us, as it is experts have predicted the death of Laguna in next five years if we do not implement measures to protect it now,” she added.
More than 16 million people rely on Laguna Lake for food, water and livelihood, but its water quality is severely compromised by pollution. Industrial pollution from factories, domestic and municipal sewage, agricultural runoff and waste dumps are among the lake’s most blatant sources of toxic pollution.
“Laguna Lake is a treasure of the province of Laguna that is why our youth saw the need to help protect it, starting with their participation in today’s global clean up. We want this to be the beginning of a longer term engagement of Laguna’s youth, as part of the Water Patrol to conserve and protect Laguna Lake,” said Fatima Villaseñor, Head of the Youth Development Affairs Office of the Province of Laguna.
The clean up, which marks the start of a partnership between the Greenpeace Water Patrol and the Youth Development Affairs Office of the Provincial Government of Laguna, was conducted in the towns of Siniloan, Sta. Cruz, and Calamba, Laguna. Greenpeace Water Patrol activists onboard rubber boats and kayaks collected floating trash in the water while Laguna youth gathered waste on the shore.
Single-use or disposable plastics are expected to be the main culprit. An audit of the collected waste will be conducted by the EcoWaste Coalition to determine the amount and kinds of plastic which end up in Laguna de Bay. After auditing, the waste will be delivered to the Materials Recovery Facility (MRF) of the City of Calamba.
Laguna Lake is currently the focus of Greenpeace’s ‘Project Clean Water.’ In April and August this year, Greenpeace Water Patrol exposed how Laguna Lake has been turning into a rubbish bin with waste dumps reclaiming the lake’s shores.
Greenpeace launched ‘Project Clean Water’ in October 2007 with the aim to bring people together toward a common goal of safeguarding our water sources, and to catalyze much-needed action to reverse the continuing decline of our country’s water resources. ©Greenpeace
Filed under: Green Choices | Tags: biodegradable, cruelty-free, eco-friendly, fairtrade, green, local, no animal testing, organic, palawan, sustainable, tagbanua
Last December 2007 in Global Pinoy Bazaar, I was so ecstatic to discover that my good friend Dona runs this new line of bath and body products… totally LOKAL…grown in the Philippine WILD… unadulterated ORGANIC.
I stopped buying shower gels and other toiletries from the groceries and just use these soaps. I really love em. They smell like the planet.
WHY “WILD ORGANIC” ROCKS:
ORGANIC baby! meaning none of those chemical junk like Sodium Laureth Sulfate (SLS), Parabens, gunk and gook. No artificial preservatives, chemicals, preservatives, colorants… it’s all natural. for example, you’d see it in the bar of soap. There are real coffee grounds, some seeds, etc.
LOKAL. the less Oil the product gets to you the better, no import shipping and additional costs, plus you’ll support local economy and community.
FAIRTRADE. some of the Wild Organics ingredients are harvested by our indigenous brothers and sisters in Palawan, the Tagbanuas. we support their livelihood when we use Wild Organics.
SUSTAINABLE. the ingredients are harvested from a well-tended forested organic farm in Palawan. plants re-generate. the cycle is fed.
THE INGREDIENTS. it makes you rethink about plants. it puts you in touch with herb magic. We are in a tropical country and it’s replete and lush with secret wonders. Some of Wild Organics ingredients: Saging, Bayabas, Sari-Saring Halaman, Kape, Papaya, Cocomilk & Honey, Neem, Talisay, Aloe, Cucumber,… all homegrown Pinas!
VEGAN/VEGETARIAN. no animal by-products. no animal testing.
ECO-FRIENDLY. Plants take the Carbon in and put Oxygen out, prevent flash floods, shelter animal species, among a slew of other great things. And they give their love…for free. Plants/trees are our big allies in our fight against climate change and Global Warming.
PRODUCTS:
SOAPS – saging (moisturizing), kape (exfoliating), deodorizing, healing, etc.
BODY OIL INFUSION – virgin coconut oil as base with a bunch of herbs
POCKET HEALER – a balm you can carry anywhere. for anything, for mild annoyances and stress.
SPECIAL BLENDS – like Citronella+Neem oil which I use against monster mosquitos by the lake. very effective.
PRICE RANGE:
PhP120 for a bar of soap. Check their website for prices.
AVAILABLE IN:
MAKATI, somewhere in Salcedo Village. contact them for exact address.
LINK:
http://wildorganics.multiply.com
http://allnaturalbeauty.multiply.com (online distributor/reseller)
ENJOY NINJA NEATNIKS!
Filed under: Uncategorized
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