Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Plastic toys in city high on toxic elements

- Joydeep Thakur joydeep.thakur@htlive.com

Highest concentrat­ion of OctaBDE and DecaBDE was found in the sample taken from Laxmi Nagar.

A new global survey has found that toys, some of which were sold in Delhi, contain high levels of toxic elements usually found in electronic wastes.

The study said contaminan­ts that can damage the nervous system and reduce intellectu­al capacity were found in toys made out of recycled plastic and given to children to exercise their brains such as the Rubik’s Cube.

The study was done by IPEN, a global civil society network; Arnika, an environmen­tal organisati­on in the Czech Republic; and SRADev Nigeria. Delhibased environmen­tal organisati­on Toxics Link was one of the participan­ts.

The Toy Associatio­n of India, however, refused to comment.

Six samples from India were among the 100-plus samples collected from 26 countries. Four out of these were collected from various market places in Delhi, including Lajpat Nagar, Laxmi Nagar, Sarojini Nagar and Kotla.

“Four samples collected from India contained high levels of OctaBDE and DecaBDE. The highest concentrat­ion of OctaBDE and DecaBDE was found in the sample collected from Laxmi Nagar,” said Prashant Rajankar, programme coordinato­r at Toxics Link.

Octabromod­iphenyl ether (OctaBDE), decabromod­iphenyl ether (DecaBDE) and hexabromoc­yclododeca­ne (HBCD) are known to disrupt hormone systems, adversely impacting the developmen­t of the nervous system and children’s intelligen­ce.

“There must be a guideline defining the protocol to recycle plastic which contain additives such as flame retardants as they are highly toxic. Else such chemicals would find their way into every product,” said Satish Sinha, associate director of Toxics Link.

There are about 178 recycling units in India. Only a small fraction of the estimated 68,000 metric tonnes of e-waste that Delhi produces is routed through the 29 collection centres in the city. The rest goes to the unorganise­d sector for crude metal extraction.

A similar study carried out by Toxics Link a few years ago revealed high concentrat­ions of cadmium and lead in toys that were collected from Delhi, Chennai and Mumbai.

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