SOME IDEAS ABOUT HOW TO MAKE USE OF WASTE GLASS COLLECTED FROM OUR WATERWAYS
SOME IDEAS ABOUT HOW TO MAKE USE OF WASTE GLASS COLLECTED FROM OUR WATERWAYS
It seems that wherever we go these
days—rivers, creeks, esteros, even along our coastlines—we see not just plastic
waste but also a good deal of glass bottles, jars, and broken fragments. While
plastics usually get the headlines, glass is just as problematic. Unlike
organic matter, it does not decompose; it just sits there, often breaking into
sharp pieces that pose dangers to humans, animals, and the environment.
So, what can we do about it? Collecting it is
the first logical step, and in fact, collecting glass is easier than collecting
plastic because glass is just one category. Plastics, by contrast, have about
seven categories, and these require separate processing streams. That makes
glass, in a way, less complicated to deal with.
But what happens after collection? That’s
where we need to get creative. In Bali, for example, they have the “Sungai
Carafe”—a beautifully designed water container made from waste glass collected
in rivers. The carafe is marketed not only as a product but as a symbol of
ecological restoration. It proves that something once polluting a river can be
turned into something useful and even elegant.
I like the concept, but I also ask: is a
carafe the best use of waste glass here in the Philippines? Art pieces and
decorative items are good, but they usually have small, niche markets. If we
want real impact, shouldn’t we be aiming for products with bigger commercial
value and broader demand? A well-promoted glass carafe could sell, yes—but how
many households or restaurants will realistically buy them?
That leads me to a bigger question: Could we
think in terms of building materials? Waste glass, after all, can be crushed
and turned back into sand or silica. This could be used for road construction,
cement mixes, or even as filler in eco-concrete. In some countries, glass is
also made into tiles and bricks. Imagine barangays producing their own
decorative glass tiles for local markets, or paving bricks that reduce
dependence on quarried stone. Wouldn’t that make a bigger dent in both waste
management and local economic development?
Of course, these ideas are not just for
entrepreneurs. I see a strong role here for cooperatives and local government
units (LGUs). Why not empower barangay-based cooperatives to run
micro-recycling hubs? With the right machines—a hammer mill or glass imploder
for crushing, and perhaps a small kiln for artisanal products—these hubs could
transform collected glass into usable raw material.
The machines are not beyond reach. A hammer
mill or crusher could cost in the range of $2,000 to $8,000, while a more
sophisticated imploder (which produces sand-like cullet safely) may run up to
$15,000. A small electric kiln suitable for glaze work starts at around $1,500.
These are not cheap, but neither are they impossible. With LGU support,
cooperative management, and perhaps funding from DTI or TESDA, barangays could
get started. Compare that investment to the costs of constantly dredging
clogged rivers or hauling endless truckloads of mixed waste to dumpsites, and
the numbers begin to make sense.
We must also link glass collection with
plastic collection. They usually accumulate in the same places anyway, and
barangay material recovery facilities (MRFs) could be equipped to handle both.
In fact, setting up a local showcase—a “Barangay Circular Market Day” where
products from reclaimed waste are sold—could boost awareness and even generate
pride. People might think twice before throwing bottles into rivers if they
know those bottles could become part of a road, a tile, or a water carafe sold
in their own community.
One more angle to consider: partnerships with
artisans. Filipinos are highly creative, and we already have pottery
traditions, glassblowing in some localities, and plenty of design schools. Why
not tap students, designers, and artisans to collaborate with barangay
cooperatives? They could co-create functional and attractive products, adding
cultural motifs or local design elements that make each item unique.
The big picture, of course, is livelihood.
Waste collectors, artisans, youth groups, and cooperatives all stand to gain
from a system where trash becomes resource. And it is not only about jobs—it is
about dignity. Turning waste into worth restores not just rivers but also
community spirit.
So here are my questions to our policymakers
and local leaders: Do we want to continue treating waste glass as useless
debris, or do we want to see it as a potential raw material for industry and
culture? Could we move beyond token projects and scale up barangay-level
recycling hubs that feed into larger markets? And could we begin to think less
about disposal and more about transformation?
If Bali can make carafes from river glass, surely,
we can do something just as creative—if not more practical. After all, we are a
nation that prides itself on ingenuity. Perhaps the next time we walk along a
riverbank and see a pile of empty bottles, we might not just see trash—we might
see the beginnings of a road, a brick, or even a new means of livelihood.
Ramon Ike V. Seneres,
www.facebook.com/ike.seneres
iseneres@yahoo.com,
senseneres.blogspot.com
10-25-2025
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