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  1. #51
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    hello pipol ......


    let's keep this thread alive and kicking ......


    comments namn dyan .......


    he!he!he!



  2. #52
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    comments please !!!!!!!

  3. #53
    What's the most ideal recycling center for old newspapers?

  4. #54
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    Quote Originally Posted by sharkey360 View Post
    What's the most ideal recycling center for old newspapers?


    hey guys .... here are some list of junkshops/ recycling centers here in cebu ..... got the list from "softtouch" .... tnx!!!!!


    Recycling Centers in Cebu

    WG&A Philippines
    Alvin Suarez
    (032)232-0421
    -aluminum cans

    Coca Bottlers Phils., Inc.
    Ramon Dumadag, Jr.
    (032)3461778
    -aluminum cans

    Recycler and Recycling Plants in Metro Cebu

    AVENUE IND’L. DEV. CORP.
    M. Ceniza ST., Maguikay, Mandaue City
    345-1429/ 345-0107
    Ernesto Damasco
    Clean plastics

    DDL Industries/ Cebu Agribusiness
    S.E. Jayme St., Paknaan, Mandaue City
    420-4413/346-1580
    Rachel Silangan
    Clean plastics

    ANCOR PLASTICS
    Lamac, Consolacion, Cebu
    345-3567/ 344-1542
    Wilson Yu
    Plastics

    PACIFIC FOUNDRY SHOP CORP.
    Hipodromo, Cbeu City
    232-1765/232-1764
    Carolina Yao
    Cast iron

    GUANGKO IRON WORKS
    Highway, Basak, Mandaue City
    346-8861
    Rosita Manuel
    Scrap cast iron

    CEBU METAL CORP.
    150 F.B. Cabahug St., Mandaue City
    221-342/ 344-1019
    Cesar Fernandez
    Scrap iron

    LUCKY TABLEWARE INC. (GLASS DIV.)
    Guadalupe, Cebu City
    221-341/ 344-1018/ 254-1342
    Teodolfo Pepito
    Clean glass

    NIHON FUJI INDUSTRIES CORP.
    Mabini St., Looc, Mandaue City
    253-0856/ 345-3571
    Macario Ampil
    Plastics

    Nanette Ramirez Scraps
    Kimba, Talisay
    273-3702
    Nanette Ramirez
    Cardboard, paper, books

    Daniel Ompad
    Pajac, Lapu-lapu City
    9173801362
    Aluminum, brass, copper, plastic, steel/iron, wood, cloth and paper/cartons

    Candelario Gabison
    Ibabaw Mactan, Lapu-lapu City
    Inh-inh Enterprise
    493-5533
    Aluminum, brass, copper, plastic, steel/iron, wood, cloth and paper/cartons

    Lorevis Enterprises
    Basak, Lapu-lapu City
    341-9099
    Elvis Vinculado
    Aluminum, copper, plastic, steel/iron, wood, cloth and paper/cartons

    Juanita Pino
    Ibo, Parola Site, Lapu-lapu City
    340-7451
    Aluminum, brass, copper, plastic, steel/iron, wood, cloth and paper/cartons

    Wendies junkshop
    Cabantan st. Bo. Luz, Cebu City
    (032) 231-1814 / 412-0933
    Mr. Jun Fernandez/ Maurina Fernandez
    Scrap iron/steel, aluminum, copper, brass, chipboard(cardboard), paper, cartons, empty bottles, broken glass(cullets), plastics

    E & J Scrap Buyer
    09176207483/5167195/3437807
    Mr.Edgar Branzuela
    Scrap metals, plastics, empty bottles, bronze, aluminum, copper wire, battery junk



  5. #55
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    Quote Originally Posted by sharkey360 View Post
    What's the most ideal recycling center for old newspapers?

    you can try calling this junk shop ....


    Wendies junkshop
    Cabantan st. Bo. Luz, Cebu City
    (032) 231-1814 / 412-0933
    Mr. Jun Fernandez/ Maurina Fernandez
    Scrap iron/steel, aluminum, copper, brass, chipboard(cardboard), paper, cartons, empty bottles, broken glass(cullets), plastics





  6. #56
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    No Money?


    A typical day in the life of an average Filipino family starts with the father leaving the house for work, the mother doing the household chores, and the children either playing or studying at school. With the price of commodities steadfastly coming to a high, an alternative source of income has become a must for every Pinoy.

    Now, what would be the cheapest, easiest way for the average Pinoy family to earn money, without having to invest on anything, and without having to leave the house? The answer, manage and sell garbage.


    From the traditional bote-dyaryo to junkshops, to materials recovery facilities to waste trade markets at the malls, selling garbage has never been easier, and better. With all these development, every Pinoy family has an all-access pass to an alternative livelihood where trash becomes cash.


    Munting Bahay Kubo.
    “Ang basura dito ay sari-sari.”


    Based on the studies made by the National Solid Waste Management Commission, every Filipino generates an estimated half a kilo of waste each day. With an estimated population of eighteen million (2000 Census-based Population Projection, National Statistics Office), the total waste generation in Metro Manila alone could run up to 7,000 metric tons per day. Or, 210,000 metric tons per month. Or, 2,520,000 million metric tons per year. This is the amount of garbage being hauled to the landfills everyday, costing the government billions of pesos. The sad part is, instead of building schools and providing medicine for the poor, a bulk of the taxpayer’s money literally gets down the dumps. Now, that is a lot of waste. Luckily, we can control the way we manage garbage because of the total waste generated within every Pinoy home, 95% can still be reused, recycled, or composted, and only 5% are made up of residuals and special/hazardous waste (Waste Analysis and Characterization Survey, Asian Development Bank, 2003).


    Now that we know why it is possible to manage garbage, the next question to answer is, “how”?


    Becoming a Manager


    Quality determines the price of a product, and the same goes when “marketing” garbage. To ensure that household wastes are not going to be “wasted”, every member of the family must become waste managers, and must learn to segregate. In the Do-It-Yourself Guide, Solid Waste Management Made Easy (published by the United Nations Development Programme), segregation at source is highlighted as the secret to an effective solid waste management.


    Wondering what segregation is?
    It is simply placing items in separate containers as we dispose of them.



    Network at the Waste Market!


    Doing business means having to partner with different organizations. In a macro-aspect, having to “market” solid waste includes coordinating with the barangays (local government units), private organizations, schools, commercial establishments, non-government organizations, group of recyclers, and the national government. Segregated wastes can be accommodated at the barangay’s Materials Recovery Facility (MRF). This is a required storage facility for segregated garbage for communities, with junkshops adopted as “official” MRFs in some barangays.


    Now, for a more modern option, we can just go to SM, Ayala malls, Robinsons and trade-in wastes for cash, or for other useful items. The SM Waste Market offers venues for us to trade-in our recyclable materials. These are junk electrical equipment and appliances; used lead acid batteries; used PET plastic bottles; and aluminum or tin cans. The Waste Market also serves as a drop-off area for polystyreneor styrofoam scrap, junk cellphones and cellphone batteries.
    Ayala Malls, on the other hand, have started as Recyclables Collection Event during Earth Day and Environment Month and then continued as Waste Markets since September 2006, and since then, have conducted exchanges in Glorietta in Makati City, in Alabang Town Center in Muntinlupa, at the Bonifacio Global City, and most recently, at the TriNoma.
    This is part of the series of successful endeavors taken by malls, to bridge the gap for a market for recyclables, to make waste trading more accessible for us who would want to recycle – and would want to earn from it. With the waste market at the malls, converting trash to cash is as easy as going on a shopping spree.


    Get Creative


    Now with some creativity, earning more money from waste is within every Pinoy family’s reach. Ever heard of Bazurabags? How about vermi-casts, organic fertilizers, briquettes, and flower pots out of sando bags and polystyrene? These are garbage, recycled and converted to “new” products, with the potential to rake money for the “creative entrepreneur”.


    Take the case of the K.I.L.U.S. Foundation (in Barangay Ugong, Pasig), makers of the internationally-famous Bazurabags. K.I.L.U.S. Foundation is an association of the women of Barangay Ugong, who pioneered the search for livelihood opportunities from garbage, converting non-recyclable juice containers to colorful, fashionable bags.


    Who would have thought that discarded doy packs could again be made useful? The women of K.I.L.U.S. Foundation did, and now, they are earning dollars from the bags. So for families with doy packs to discard, sell them to the K.I.L.U.S. Multi-purpose Environmental Cooperative at 36 C. Santos St., Ugong, Pasig City, or contact Ms. Editha Santiago, Chairperson of the Foundation. The municipality of E.B. Magalona even uses doy packs creatively
    (and colorfully) for pedicabs and office chairs.


    We have covered doy packs, so let’s go to another type of plastic, the

    sando bags. Sunday markets will not be complete without having to go home with sando bags. Since 2004, the Environmental Management Bureau of the Department of Environment and Natural Resources launched a campaign dubbed, “Mag-Bawas Balot, Bawas Basura Tayo!”, targeted to minimize the use of sando bags among market vendors, and buyers, to prevent plastics from clogging esteros and canals.

    Yearly, 330 kilometers of rivers and esteros, and sewerages, are being de-clogged of plastics, and 2,100 kilometers of roads being swept of 6 tons of garbage – a problem needed to be addressed by proper waste management, and by waste AVOIDANCE. Used sando bags can be sold in volume, can be recycled, and melted to become useful products like flower pots and foot walks. Used sando bags, other plastics, and even polystyrene (styropor) are melted using the Styro-Oven, a technology developed by the Industrial Technology Development Institute of the Department of Science and Technology (DOST) which melts polystyrene and plastic materials with used cooking oil to become useful products such as tiles, panel
    boards, table tops, synthetic, lumber, school desks, and chairs. These are school and office furniture people would readily buy. In fact, some of these tiles will be used at the Pasig River linear parks! Corn husks are transformed into dolls and accessories, while concrete products are also being produced from the integrated solid waste management facility located at the Sitio Pantay, Dalig, Teresa in Rizal. Money equals Advocacy


    Managing and selling wastes is not just about the money, it is also about the environment. When we segregate wastes, place them in MRFs, or recycle them into functional pieces, not only are we earning money but we are taking part in the global campaign to save our environment.


    It also means having to follow (while earning) the Ecological Solid Waste Management Act of 2000 (Republic Act 9003), a law about the control, transfer, transport, processing, and disposal of solid waste in the country. In short, it is like hitting two birds with one stone.


    From trading garbage at the waste markets to making crafts out of it, people are really earning cash from trash. When we do our share in segregating and recycling our garbage, we help in putting a stop to the 30 years garbage problem our country is facing, and at the same time, earn from it.
    Earning money from garbage is easy, you surely will never look at garbage the same way again – for now, garbage has become a valuable resource. ###
    -------
    For more information on how to manage wastes, contact the National
    Solid Waste Management Commission – Secretariat, Environmental
    Management Bureau – DENR, 2nd Flr., HRD Building, DENR
    Compound, Visayas Avenue, Diliman, Quezon City, Telephone
    numbers: (632) 920-2252, 920-2279, 925-4796 / 925-4797 local 3



  7. #57
    help ko up ani...

    i'm an environmentalist and this is one great way to help people be aware on how to save the environment... thanks so much softouch... from now on i will start segregating my trash to save mother earth and i'm starting to conserve energy as well... kat-on na ko ug unplug sa mga appliances na wala gamita...

  8. #58
    i'll add to this list:

    Paper Savers and Trading Corporation
    194-C Lu Tai Compound, Subangdaku, Mandaue City
    346-4477 / 422-3495

    "Worry-free paper disposal"

  9. #59
    pa subscribe ko.

  10. #60
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    Quote Originally Posted by endomorph88 View Post
    i'll add to this list:

    Paper Savers and Trading Corporation
    194-C Lu Tai Compound, Subangdaku, Mandaue City
    346-4477 / 422-3495

    "Worry-free paper disposal"
    Added to the list in the first post.

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