Shanghai Daily

Mumbai hands out fines for plastic rule violations

- (AFP)

BURGER King, McDonald’s and Starbucks are among dozens of companies fined for violating a new ban on single-use plastics in India’s commercial capital Mumbai, an official said yesterday.

The rules, in force since Saturday, prohibit the use of disposable plastic items such as bags, cutlery, cups and bottles under a certain size.

Businesses and residents face fines of between 5,000 rupees (US$73) for a first-time offence to 25,000 rupees or even three months in jail for repeat offending.

Some 250 officials, wearing blue uniforms and dubbed Mumbai’s “anti-plastic squad” have been deployed to carry out inspection­s of restaurant­s and shops across the teeming coastal city of 20 million.

Nidhi Choudhari, a deputy municipal commission­er in charge of enforcing the ban said 660,000 rupees in fines had been collected during the first three days.

She said 132 premises had been issued with penalties including outlets of Burger King, McDonald’s and Starbucks.

A branch of Godrej Nature’s Basket, a high-end Indian supermarke­t, had also been penalized, Choudhari added.

Authoritie­s hope the ban will help clean up Mumbai’s beaches and streets, which like other cites in India are awash with vast mountains of plastic rubbish.

Plastic has also been blamed for blocking drains and contributi­ng to flooding during the city’s four-month-long summer monsoon.

Authoritie­s first announced the ban — which covers the whole of Maharashtr­a state, of which Mumbai is the capital — three months ago to allow businesses to prepare.

The majority of India’s 29 states have a full or partial ban on single-use plastics but the law is rarely enforced.

Choudhari said over 8,000 businesses had been searched in Mumbai alone and at least 700 kilograms of plastic seized.

Small traders, however, have claimed that the crackdown threatens their livelihood­s.

Retailers associatio­ns say a confusion over what is and isn’t allowed has led small grocery stores to remain closed for fear of being fined.

The Plastic Bags Manufactur­ers Associatio­n of India estimates that 300,000 people employed in the industry could lose their jobs.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China