Greenresearch Environmental Research Group Inc.

Greenresearch Environmental Research Group Inc. Greenresearch Environmental Research Group Inc.

is a development “think tank” which prioritizes sociological research and policy analyses on the Philippine environment. As an Environmental Research Group, Greenresearch is strongly committed to the development of creative, reflexive, action-oriented, and process-oriented knowledge products through the use of interdisciplinary perspectives and participatory approaches. Greenresearch collabor

ates with the church, academe, youth organizations, people’s organizations (POs), non-government organizations (NGOs), government organizations (GOs), networks, coalitions, and social movements in search for better alternatives towards people empowerment and sustainable development.

Greenresearch echoes and supports the analysis articulated by Dr. Jorge Emmanuel about waste-to-energy (WtE) incineratio...
16/04/2026

Greenresearch echoes and supports the analysis articulated by Dr. Jorge Emmanuel about waste-to-energy (WtE) incineration as a dangerous technology.

Jorge Emmanuel, an adjunct professor of engineering and environmental science at Siliman University, tells Rappler on Friday, April 10, that the rising trend...

Greenresearch Environmental Research Group Inc. Executive Director, Patria  Gwen M.L. Borcena, M.A. participated as a re...
03/12/2025

Greenresearch Environmental Research Group Inc. Executive Director, Patria Gwen M.L. Borcena, M.A. participated as a resource person in her capacity as an environmental sociologist during the hearing about the proposed bills on waste-to-energy (WtE) called by the Joint Committee of Ecology and Committee of Energy at the House of Representatives on November 27, 2025. Representatives from the Ecowaste Coalition, Global Alliance for Incinerator Alternatives (GAIA), and Mother Earth Foundation also served as resource persons.

Greenresearch's ED stressed the importance of participatory governance and environmental democracy in the crafting and passage of government policies and legislations. She articulated the strong opposition of many civil society organizations (CSOs) to the proposed waste-to-energy technology as evidenced by the CSOs’ Unity Statement: Urgent Call for a Pro-Filipino Climate and Environment Agenda (Panawagan para sa Maka-Pilipinong Agenda ukol sa Klima at Kalikasan) which was signed by 132 CSOs including big networks and religious organizations (February 7, 2022). This CSOs’ Unity Statement stressed the urgent need to shift towards a greener economic development framework. Aligned with the imperative of inclusive, transparent, just, and effective climate and environmental governance, important policy recommendations were identified. Among these include the following: “Pursue environment-friendly economic policies and programs, and avoid investments in environmentally harmful activities, such as commercial logging, large-scale inland and offshore mining, coal-fired power plants, nuclear energy, waste-to-energy, large dams, and reclamation (dump and fill projects);”.

Thus, we are very disturbed and angered that the Department of Energy (DoE) released a post indicating that CSOs are supporting their push for WtE in its page tagging other agencies (Energy Regulatory Commission, DILG Philippines, Department of Environment and Natural Resources, and Presidential Legislative Liaison Office) on December 2, 2025. The DoE referred to a Multi-Stakeholder Forum which was held on November 28, 225 (a day after the said hearing at the House of Representatives). Prior to the hastily called hearing in Congress and this DOE Multi-stakeholder event, some CSOs already articulated our strong opposition to WtE and nuclear energy during the Kamayan para sa Kalikasan Forum held online with representatives from the DOE on November 21, 2025.

The DOE and other national government agencies (NGAs) continue to play deaf to the voices of CSOs. Moreover, DOE even created a “fake news” about CSOs supporting their push for false solutions addressing climate emergency and solid waste issues by pushing for controversial WtE.

The DOE has to retrack this false statement and update its press release by pointing out that CSOs are opposed to WtE.

MISINFORMATION ALERT | False information promoting false solutions!

In observance of World Pollution Prevention Day, the EcoWaste Coalition with over 130 public interest groups across the Philippines working for sustainable solutions to waste and chemical issues is setting the record straight: WE REJECT Waste-to-Energy (WtE) incineration!

A recent post shared by the Department of Energy (DOE) Philippines earlier today at 2PM, have fronted and listed environmental groups and civil society organizations as lead supporters of WtE. The Coalition vehemently opposes the spread of this misleading narrative.

The DOE organized a Multi-Sectoral Forum last November 28, 2025, and we EXPLICITLY OPPOSED the proposed WtE and there was NO CONSENSUS.

​We DO NOT SUPPORT legislation that attempts to rebrand incineration as a solution to the waste crisis. WtE technologies are in DIRECT CONTRADICTION to the mandates of the Philippine Clean Air Act (RA 8749) and the Ecological Solid Waste Management Act (RA 9003).

BURNING or incinerating waste transforms trash into TOXIC pollution, releasing HAZARDOUS substances that THREATEN public health and our environment.

We stand for REAL SOLUTIONS: waste reduction, segregation at source, sustaining reuse systems, and campaigning for safer, decent, and sustainable communities.

​We demand accountability and accurate representation of our position.

21/11/2025
20/11/2025
19/11/2025
19/11/2025

💫Sixty two institutions—from Catholic dioceses to Protestant banks—have announced their decision to divest from fossil fuels, sending a clear signal to world leaders: it’s time to end the fossil fuel era and embrace a future rooted in justice and care for our Common Home.

☘️This moment represents one of the largest faith-based divestment announcements to date, showing how commitment can inspire real-world transformation.

✔️ https://laudatosimovement.org/news/faith-in-action-62-institutions-choose-the-planet-over-profit/

03/11/2025

Caritas Asia
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
October 29, 2025

Asian Churches Call for Justice: Philippine Catholic Church Backs Global Push to “Turn Debt into Hope”

At the end of the 47th ASEAN Summit, churches in Asia call on ASEAN member states and international financial institutions to move beyond business-as-usual models that prioritize economic growth and instead to embrace a regional framework for ecological debt relief, to phase out fossil fuel dependency, and to redirect financial flows toward loss-and-damage funds and community-led renewable energy initiatives.

The appeal also comes just weeks ahead of COP30, where nations are expected to strengthen their climate commitments under the Paris Agreement.

The Federation of Asian Bishops’ Conferences (FABC) has sounded a united call: rich nations must pay their ecological debt through fair climate finance—without further indebting the Global South. This demand, rooted in justice, seeks to address the mounting losses and damages in Africa, Asia, Latin America and the Caribbean, and Oceania—regions least responsible for the climate crisis but most gravely affected by it.

According to the Catholic Agency for Overseas Development (CAFOD), “about 3.3 billion people now live in countries like the Philippines, Bangladesh and Sri Lanka, that spend more on repaying debts than on healthcare, education, or tackling climate crisis.”

At the same time, governance weaknesses and corruption risks in climate finance mean that resources meant for the poorest are often diverted—turning ecological debt into a double injustice, as what is happening in the Philippines.

In response, the Office on Human Development and Climate Change Desk of the Federation of Asian Bishops’ Conference and at least eight Caritas Asia member organizations - including those from Bangladesh, Indonesia, Cambodia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Taiwan, Malaysia, and the Philippines - have already signed the Turn Debt Into Hope petition.

Bishop Allwyn D’Silva of the Office on Human Development and Climate Change Desk of the Federation of Asian Bishops’ Conference said that “Asia’s cry for equity is a cry for life. The peoples of our region, who contribute the least to the climate crisis, continue to pay the highest price. We urge the industrialized nations to acknowledge their responsibility and commit to fair climate finance, without adding to the debt burdens of our countries.”

Cardinal Pablo Virgilio David of the Catholic Bishops’ Conference of the Philippines reaffirmed this moral urgency saying, “the burden of ecological debt is not just a financial concern—it is a moral wound inflicted on the poor and on our common home.”

“As bishops, we raise our voices in unity to call for debt relief and just reparation, so that vulnerable nations like ours may break free from the chains of dependence on fossil fuels and finally transition to life-giving renewable energy. This is not charity—it is justice, and it is the only path toward a future of hope for our people and for generations yet to come.”

Goldman prize for environment awardees Batmunkh Luvsandash (Mongolia, 2025), Alok Shukla (India, 2024), and Delima Silalahi (Indonesia, 2023), and Rene Pamplona, the 2018 Alexander Soros Foundation Awardee for Environment and Human Rights Activism were among the individual signatories in Asia.

The Philippines leads the signatories, with 93 Church leaders and Sen. Risa Hontiveros, affirming their moral stand for debt relief and climate justice.

Bishop Gerardo Alminaza, incoming president of Caritas Philippines, further emphasized that “the climate crisis is disproportionately borne by nations that contributed least to it. To call for debt relief is to demand justice and acknowledge there is an ecological debt crisis. We cannot simply ask the world to change without also changing ourselves.

He stressed that “each diocese must live out ecological conversion through initiatives like bamboo forests, organic and natural farming, rediscovering indigenous food systems, and protecting watersheds. At the same time, we must cry out with the poor and confront unjust systems that perpetuate their suffering.”

Pope Leo XIV, during the Raising Hope for Climate Justice Conference, reminded the world that ecological debt is not only an economic imbalance but a profound moral crisis—a wound that demands conversion, solidarity, and structural change.
The Turn Debt Into Hope campaign calls on wealthy nations, financial institutions, and ASEAN member states to acknowledge their ecological debt, end the proliferation of fossil fuels, and ensure a just energy transition that uplifts communities rather than indebts them.

“This is not merely a political demand—it is a moral imperative. To turn debt into hope is to heal creation’s wounds, restore dignity to the poor, and build an Asia that is free, resilient, and reconciled with our common home,” according to Caritas Asia.

29/10/2025

PRESS RELEASE | EcoWaste Coalition Deplores Unabated Sale of Mercury-Added Cosmetics despite the Global Ban

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The toxics watchdog group EcoWaste Coalition expressed utmost dismay over the brazen violation of the global ban on the use of mercury in cosmetics such as creams and soaps for lightening the skin tone.

The group expressed its disappointment ahead of the Sixth Conference of the Parties (COP6) of the Minamata Convention on Mercury on November 3 to 7, and the eight anniversary of the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) Advisory No. 2017-289 issued on October 30, 2017 banning Pakistan-made Goree Beauty Cream, which may contain mercury as high as 46,900 ppm.

The group urged duty-bearers, governments in particular, to unleash their regulatory powers to enforce the phase-out deadline this year on the manufacture, import or export of mercury-added cosmetics, and for them to carry out further measures to protect human health and the environment from mercury use in cosmetics.

[Access the full press release in the comments.]

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