India Plastics Pact

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    In News

    • India has become the first Asian country to launch the Plastics Pact.

    What are Plastic Pacts?

    About:

    • It is a network of initiatives that bring together all key stakeholders at the national or regional level to implement solutions for plastic eradication.
    • First Plastics Pact was launched in the U.K. in 2018.

    Objectives: 

    • To eliminate unnecessary and problematic plastic packaging through innovation
    • To increase the reuse, collection, and recycling of plastic packaging

    India Plastics Pact:

    • A joint initiative between the World Wide Fund for Nature-India (WWF India) and the Confederation of Indian Industry (CII).
    • Aim & Objectives: Commitments for building a circular system for plastics by 2030:
      • Complement India’s other bold initiatives in the renewables sector and efforts to limit single-use plastics.
      • 100 per cent of plastic packaging to be reusable or recyclable.

    Plastic Waste in India

    • India generates 9.46 metric tonnes of plastic waste annually, of which 40 per cent is not collected. 
    • India consumes about 13 million tonnes of plastic and recycles only about 4 million tonnes.

    Major Concerns of Plastic Use

    • Plastic waste is blocking sewers, threatening marine life and generating health risks for residents in landfills or the natural environment.
    • Financial costs of marine plastic pollution: According to conservative forecasts made in March 2020, the direct harm to the blue economy of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations will be $2.1 billion per year.
      • Boats become entangled in abandoned or discarded fishing nets or their engines may become blocked with plastic debris.
    • Enormous social costs: Residents of coastal regions suffer from the harmful health impacts of plastic pollution and waste brought in by the tides and are inextricably linked to the fishing and tourism industry for their livelihoods.
    • Food and Health: Invisible plastic has been identified in tap water, beer, salt and are present in all samples collected in the world’s oceans, including the Arctic.
      • The transfer of contaminants between marine species and humans through the consumption of seafood has been identified as a health hazard.
    • Climate change: Plastic, which is a petroleum product, also contributes to global warming. If plastic waste is incinerated, it releases carbon dioxide into the atmosphere, thereby increasing carbon emissions.
    • Tourism: Plastic waste damages the aesthetic value of tourist destinations, leading to decreased tourism-related incomes and major economic costs related to the cleaning and maintenance of the sites.
    • Water Pollution: Causing Soil & Groundwater pollution.

    Global Efforts To Tackle it

    • 1972 Convention on the Prevention of Marine Pollution by Dumping Wastes and Other Matter (or the London Convention).
    •  Protocol to the International Convention for the Prevention of Pollution from Ships (MARPOL).
    • Glo Litter Partnerships Project (Launched by the IMO)

    Initiatives of India

    • The Plastic Waste Management Rules, 2016 clearly stipulate that urban local bodies (ULBs) should ban less than 50 micron thick plastic bags and not allow usage of recycled plastics for packing food, beverage or any other eatables.
    • The Rules also require that local bodies should provide separate collection, storage and processing of plastic waste in their areas.
    • The government has set an ambitious target of eliminating single-use plastics by 2022.
    • India is a signatory to MARPOL (International Convention on Prevention of Marine Pollution).
    • In addition, the Prevention of Marine Pollution is also dealt with by Merchant Shipping Rules, 2009 framed under the Merchant Shipping Act, 1958.
    • Ban on Single-Use Plastics in a bid to free India of single-use plastics by 2022.
    • Swachh Bharat Mission
    • Project REPLAN

    Way Ahead

    • Designing a product: Identifying plastic items that can be replaced with non-plastic, recyclable, or biodegradable materials is the first step. 
      • Find alternatives to single-use plastics and reusable design goods by working with product designers. Countries must embrace circular and sustainable economic practices throughout the plastics value chain to accomplish this.
    • Pricing: Plastics are inexpensive because they are made with substantially subsidised oil and may be produced at a lower cost, with fewer economic incentives to employ recycled plastics. Promoting alternative materials or reused and recycled plastics are necessary.
    • Technologies and Innovation: Developing tools and technology to assist governments and organisations in measuring and monitoring plastic garbage in cities. 
      • ‘Closing the loop’ project of the United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific assists cities in developing more inventive policy solutions to tackle the problem. A similar approach can be adopted in India. 
    • Promoting a plastic-free workplace: All catering operations should be prohibited from using single-use plastics. To encourage workers and clients to improve their habits, all single-use goods can be replaced with reusable items or more sustainable single-use alternatives. 
    • Producer responsibility: Extended responsibility can be applied in the retail (packaging) sector, where producers are responsible for collecting and recycling products that they launch into the market.
    • Municipal and community actions: Beach and river clean-ups, public awareness campaigns explaining how people’s actions contribute to marine plastic pollution (or how they may solve it) and disposable plastic bag bans and levies.
    • Multi-stakeholder collaboration: Government ministries at the national and local levels must collaborate in the development, implementation and oversight of policies, which includes participation from industrial firms, non-governmental organisations and volunteer organisations. 
    • Other steps:  Several steps to combat plastic pollution like identifying hotspots for plastic leakage can assist governments in developing effective policies that address the plastic problem directly.

    Source: LM