*Dr. Rodolfo John Ortiz Teope, PhD, EdD, DM
Imagine this.
A father spends twenty years working abroad. Every overtime pay, every missed birthday, every Christmas spent away from his family has only one dream—to finally build a decent home when he returns to the Philippines.
After years of sacrifice, he watches the first steel bars rise from the foundation. Habang nakatayo siya sa harap ng bahay, ang nasa isip niya ay hindi lamang bubong at pader. Ang nakikita niya ay kinabukasan ng kanyang pamilya. Safety. Stability. Security.
But what if, years later, he discovers that some of the steel circulating in the market may have originated from contaminated scrap materials?
Suddenly, the question is no longer about construction.
It becomes personal.
“Ligtas ba talaga ang bahay na pinaghirapan ko?”
That, perhaps, is the biggest lesson behind the Sanjia Steel controversy.
Many people initially saw the issue as simply another environmental violation or another corporate investigation. Others dismissed it as a technical matter that only engineers or scientists should understand.
I respectfully disagree.
This is not merely a steel story.
This is a story about trust.
Trust that the products we buy are safe.
Trust that government regulators are protecting the public.
Trust that the school where our children study, the hospital where our loved ones are treated, the bridge we cross every day, and the home we proudly built are constructed using materials that meet the highest standards of safety.
Once that trust is shaken, rebuilding it becomes far more difficult than rebuilding any structure.
Recent government operations involving Sanjia Steel and the discovery of hazardous waste activities in Pampanga exposed something far bigger than isolated regulatory violations. They revealed weaknesses that may exist within the country’s entire industrial supply chain—from importation, customs inspection, manufacturing, environmental regulation, and product quality assurance to law enforcement against transnational environmental crime.
Hindi na ito simpleng usapin ng bakal.
Usapin na ito ng pambansang kaligtasan.
Radioactive materials are not uncommon. They are legitimately used in hospitals, research laboratories, mining, manufacturing, industrial gauges, and scientific facilities around the world. When properly regulated, these materials provide enormous benefits to society.
The danger begins only when radioactive sources escape regulatory control.
Experts call these “orphan sources”—radioactive materials that have been abandoned, lost, stolen, or illegally traded. Kapag ang mga ito ay napasama sa ordinaryong scrap metal at natunaw sa isang steel furnace, maaaring kumalat ang contamination sa buong production process.
Instead of remaining inside one discarded machine, radioactive materials may contaminate molten steel, furnace dust, slag, industrial equipment, and potentially finished products.
Fortunately, publicly available information does not indicate that the Sanjia incident produced an immediate large-scale radiation emergency. Ngunit hindi iyon ang tunay na punto.
The issue is not whether the radiation was immediately dangerous.
The issue is that radioactive materials should never have entered the manufacturing process in the first place.
Sa larangan ng radiation safety, prevention is everything.
Because once radioactive materials lose regulatory control, public confidence also begins to disappear.
Imagine buying bottled drinking water only to learn later that contaminated water accidentally entered the bottling plant. Even if laboratory tests eventually showed only minimal contamination, would consumers immediately regain confidence?
Probably not.
Steel is no different.
Infrastructure is built not only with steel and concrete.
It is built with public trust.
The concern becomes even greater when hazardous waste enters the picture.
Hazardous waste is far more than ordinary industrial garbage. It may contain lead, mercury, cadmium, arsenic, chromium, toxic solvents, corrosive chemicals, and other dangerous substances capable of damaging both human health and the environment.
Unlike ordinary contaminants, heavy metals accumulate slowly inside the body. They may remain for years, gradually affecting the brain, kidneys, liver, nervous system, and reproductive health. Ang mas nakababahala, ang mga bata ang kadalasang pinaka-vulnerable dahil mas mabilis silang sumipsip ng toxic substances.
Hindi mo agad mararamdaman ang epekto.
Pero maaaring unti-unti nitong sirain ang kalusugan ng tao at ang ating kapaligiran.
That is precisely why Republic Act No. 6969 exists.
The law regulates hazardous substances and nuclear wastes because government recognizes that once these materials contaminate rivers, groundwater, agricultural land, or communities, the damage becomes extremely expensive—and sometimes impossible—to reverse.
The Philippines therefore does not suffer from a lack of laws.
What we continue to struggle with is effective enforcement.
One question many Filipinos have asked is simple:
“If government already confiscated the contaminated materials, ano na ang mangyayari ngayon?”
Containment is only the first chapter.
The contaminated materials must remain isolated inside secured facilities under the supervision of the Philippine Nuclear Research Institute (PNRI) and other competent agencies. Every movement must be documented. Every container must be monitored. Every storage facility must be regularly inspected.
But containment alone is never enough.
Government must continuously monitor surrounding rivers, groundwater, drainage systems, soil, air quality, wastewater, and nearby communities.
Even contaminated dust carried by strong winds can become an environmental concern if not properly managed.
Likewise, contaminated wastewater should never be allowed to reach rivers or agricultural areas without proper treatment.
In other words, government must not simply store hazardous materials.
It must prevent them from escaping into the environment.
Eventually, scientific assessment will determine the appropriate long-term solution.
Some materials may undergo decontamination.
Others may require permanent engineered storage.
Certain hazardous wastes may need specialized treatment.
Where international agreements allow, contaminated materials may even be returned to their country of origin.
Every decision, however, must be based on science—not speculation.
But perhaps the biggest lesson lies elsewhere.
The best solution is not better cleanup.
The best solution is making sure contamination never enters the country in the first place.
Every shipment of imported scrap metal should undergo radiation screening before leaving the port.
Radiation Portal Monitors should become standard equipment in major ports, recycling centers, and steel manufacturing facilities.
High-risk shipments should undergo laboratory confirmation before release.
Finished steel products should also be subjected to periodic quality verification.
Sa madaling salita, huwag nating hintayin na matunaw na ang contaminated scrap bago natin ito makita.
Harangin natin ito habang nasa pantalan pa lamang.
Unfortunately, environmental crimes have become one of the fastest-growing forms of transnational organized crime.
Illegal waste trafficking generates billions of dollars because proper disposal is expensive. Criminal organizations exploit differences in environmental regulations, disguise hazardous waste as recyclable materials, falsify shipping documents, and exploit weak enforcement mechanisms.
Kaya hindi na sapat na DENR lamang ang kikilos.
This is where environmental protection meets national security.
The PNRI, DENR, Bureau of Customs, Department of Trade and Industry, Philippine National Police, National Bureau of Investigation, Bureau of Fire Protection, and the Presidential Anti-Organized Crime Commission must operate not as separate agencies but as one coordinated national security network.
Today, national security is no longer measured only by fighter aircraft, warships, or military strength.
It is also measured by the integrity of our food supply, our medicine, our water, our construction materials, our energy systems, and our industrial supply chains.
A country that cannot protect these critical systems becomes vulnerable—not through military invasion—but through silent infiltration.
That is why I strongly believe the Philippines should establish a Philippine Radioactive and Hazardous Materials Security System—a unified national framework that oversees hazardous materials from importation to final disposal.
Such a system should integrate customs intelligence, environmental regulation, industrial quality assurance, radiation safety, criminal investigation, emergency response, and international cooperation into one coordinated strategy.
Hindi ito gastusin.
Ito ay investment para sa kaligtasan ng susunod na henerasyon.
The Sanjia Steel controversy should therefore never be remembered simply as another corporate investigation.
It should become the turning point that convinced the Philippines to strengthen its entire hazardous materials management system.
Because every Filipino deserves to know that the steel supporting his home is safe.
Every parent deserves confidence that the school protecting their children was built with uncompromised materials.
Every patient deserves assurance that the hospital caring for them was constructed with products that passed the highest standards.
And every hardworking Filipino deserves to believe that the government values prevention just as much as prosecution.
As I often say, good governance is not measured by how well government responds after a crisis. It is measured by how effectively it prevents the crisis from happening at all.
If the Sanjia Steel case teaches us anything, it is this:
Hazardous waste is no longer merely an environmental issue. It is a public health issue. It is an economic issue. It is an infrastructure issue. It is an organized crime issue. Above all, it is a national security issue.
The strongest foundation of any nation is not concrete or steel.
It is the trust of its people.
And that trust is something we must never allow to become contaminated.
#DJOT
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Dear friends,
*About the author:

