Ottawa has hired a company to bring dozens of containers of rotting garbage back to Canada from the Philippines in the coming days.
Environment and Climate Change Minister Catherine McKenna announced on Wednesday that her government has awarded a contract to Bolloré Logistics Canada to remove the garbage by the end of June.
Her office said the garbage will be treated to meet Canadian safety and health requirements, and will be disposed of by the end of this summer.
McKenna also said all the costs associated with the preparation, transfer, shipment and disposal of the waste will be covered by the Canadian government, but it’s not clear how much it will be.
McKenna’s announcement comes just hours after Philippines President Rodrigo Duterte ordered his government to hire a private shipping company to leave 69 containers of garbage in Canada’s territorial waters .
“The president’s stance is as principled as it is uncompromising: The Philippines as an independent sovereign nation must not be treated as trash by other foreign nations,” presidential spokesperson Salvador Panelo told a media briefing Wednesday.
“If Canada will not accept their trash, we will leave the same within its territorial waters or 12 nautical miles out to sea from the baseline of any of their country’s shores.”
Panelo had said the Philippines would pay for shipping the garbage.
Sorting trash responsibility
Canada has long argued the festering trash, sent to the Philippines between 2013 and 2014, was a commercial transaction not backed by the Canadian government.
Last month, Ottawa offered to reclaim the rubbish, but missed a May 15 deadline set by Manila to take back the shipment, prompting the Philippines to withdraw top diplomats from Canada last week.
The Philippines has made several diplomatic protests to Canada since a 2016 court ruling that the garbage be returned.
The consignments were labelled as containing plastics to be recycled in the Philippines, but were filled with a variety of rubbish including diapers, newspapers and water bottles.
The issue is not the only one to strain ties between the two countries.
Last year, Duterte ordered the military to cancel a $233-million US deal to buy 16 helicopters from Canada, after Ottawa expressed concern they could be used to fight rebels.
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