| At a time when
Indian cities and the rural countryside are reeling
under a plastic waste crisis, official import data indicates
that India has been a favored dumping ground for plastic
wastes, mostly from industrialized countries like Canada,
Denmark, Germany, UK, the Netherlands, Japan, France
and the United States. According to the Government of
India import data, more than 59,000 tons and 61,000
tons of plastic wastes have found their way into India
in the years 1999 and 2000 respectively. The imports
included wastes of highly toxic plastics such as PVC
(poly vinyl chloride), exported primarily from United
States, Taiwan, the Netherlands, Japan, France, UK and
Belgium.
The expose on plastic waste dumping in India takes on
a serious tone in the context of the soon-to-be concluded
Ranganath Mishra Committee. The Ministry of Environment
and Forests, represented by Dr. Indrani Chandrasekharan,
has barred the participation of public interest groups,
trade unions, ragpicker associations and environmentalists
in the committee, which is deliberating on issues impacting
on public health, worker safety and the environment.
Ironically, apart from government officials, the only
other organisation allowed consistent access to the
Committee's decision-making is the Indian Centre for
Plastics and Environment, an organization set up by
the plastics industry and funded by Reliance, India's
largest plastics manufacturer.
In an easy swoop, the Ministry of Environment has done
away with transparency, public participation and the
principle of Polluter Pays, all upheld by the Supreme
Court. It is ironical that the agency set up to protect
the environment is championing incineration -- one of
the most notorious sources of pollution as well as uncontrolled
consumption -- while policies all over the world are
aimed at reducing waste.
NoPE has called for an immediate ban on the imports
of plastic wastes, and recommends a comprehensive mechanism
for dealing with the plastics problems based on:
a. Transparency and Public Participation: The Ranganath
Mishra Committee should end its closed-door negotiations
with the polluter, namely the plastics industry, and
restart the policy discussions with broad-based public
participation.
b. The principle of Polluter Pays must be enforced-
the plastics industry and bulk plastics users like Pepsi,
Coca Cola and Bisleri, should be held responsible for
the retrieval and safe processing or disposal of plastic
wastes.
c. Plastics Use Reduction: Phase out the use of plastics
from non-priority areas such as carry bags, short-life
packaging; restrict the use of plastics to select priority
areas.
d. Revisit recycling: Recycling is not always green.
Most plastics can only be downcycled into lower-quality
products that often have higher and more leachable levels
of toxic additives. In India, recycling facilities are
operated by migrant and unprotected workers including
a large number of children. Recycling, where possible,
should be done in state-of-the-art facilities with full
regard given to worker and environmental safety.
e. Phase out toxic plastics like poly vinyl chloride
(PVC) and the use of toxic additives such as cancer-causing
phthalates, and poisonous heavy metals in other plastics.
Plastics are inherently unsustainable, coming as they
do from non-renewable petroleum sources. From cradle
to grave, plastics are implicated in a variety of problems,
including environmental pollution and worker health
hazards during manufacture, processing and disposal;
toxic exposure to consumers during use; cattle and wildlife
deaths due to ingestion of plastic wastes.
NoPE is a nationwide coalition aimed at holding the
plastics industry responsible for the damage caused
by plastics
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