Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

Plastic out, bottles from home back as Parliament goes green

- Saubhadra Chatterji letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEWDELHI: After three unsuccessf­ul attempts, Parliament has finally stopped the use of packaged drinking water bottles and other disposable plastic items on its premises. Lok Sabha Speaker Om Birla’s action against singleuse plastic has earned praise from a large number of MPs, but sceptics still wonder how sustainabl­e the ban will prove to be.

According to two senior officials involved in the purchase of water bottles that were widely used in the Parliament complex, an average of 2,000 bottles of Rail Neer, a product of Indian Railway Catering and Tourism Corporatio­n, were bought daily.

The annual supply of more than 600,000 bottles suddenly came to a halt following a circular issued on August 19 on “total prohibitio­n of use of plastic bottles and other plastic items within Parliament House complex”.

Glasses of water have replaced bottles in all meetings and more officials have started bringing water bottles from home.

“The security officers are checking if people are bringing plastic wraps or single-use plastic bags. They are reminded of the order and requested not to bring any such item in future,” a senior officer involved in Parliament’s security said on condition of anonymity.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi has been at the vanguard of a campaign against single-use plastic, using his Independen­ce Day speech from the ramparts of the Red Fort to eliminate the use of these polluting items by 2022. Disposable plastics are the least biodegrada­ble and with the lowest possibilit­y of being reconverte­d.

The Lok Sabha Speaker’s office told HT that big water dispensers will be installed in large numbers across the Parliament building, library and the annexe to make it easier for people to get drinking water. “Thousands of paper cups will also be made available every day along with the dispensers,” said a close aide to Birla. The Lok Sabha Speaker is deemed as the custodian of Parliament premises.

This is not the first attempt to get rid of single-use plastic in Parliament. In June 2015, the Lok Sabha secretaria­t issued the first order to prohibit use of plastics in the complex. The next order came on May 2017, followed by another appeal in April 2018. “But none of the previous orders were as effective as the recent one, as there was laxity in enforcemen­t of the order. People took it lightly and plastic bottles continued to come to Parliament complex,” said a joint-secretary level official.

This time, the picture looks different. Last week, a number of Parliament­ary committees met for the first time following their reconstitu­tion in the new Lok Sabha and in no meeting were plastic water bottles served. Thirsty MPs had to drink RO water in glasses.

Chairman of the standing committee on labour and consecutiv­e six-term MP Bhartruhar­i Mahtab welcomed the anti-plastic campaign. “Till 15 years ago, there were no facility for water or snacks for MPs in the Parliament annexe, where most of the committee meetings take place. No water or food was even allowed in committee meetings. Earlier in central hall, water was served in glasses. Between 2004 and 2005, after some MPs raised the issue, the secretaria­t started serving water in plastic bottles. And over the years, it almost became a norm as it was very convenient to handle and distribute,” said Mahtab.

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