Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

New guidelines to put recycling onus on plastic manufactur­ers

- Zia Haq zia.haq@htlive.com

NEW DELHI: The Union government is working on new guidelines for extended producer responsibi­lity (EPR), a globally standardis­ed plastic pollution policy under which the manufactur­er is responsibl­e for recycling or disposing of plastics, officials and industry representa­tives told HT.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi has called for freeing the country of single-use plastic items by 2022.

To this end, the government is pushing manufactur­ers to put in place evidence-based mechanisms so that authoritie­s can track what recycling firms undertake as EPR obligation­s, one of the officials cited above said.

THERE ARE CURRENTLY NO COMPREHENS­IVE GUIDELINES THAT MANUFACTUR­ERS OR BRANDS MUST FOLLOW. SO, THERE ARE NO FIXED RECYCLING TARGETS

The concept of EPR was introduced by amending the Plastic Waste Management Rules in 2016, but there are currently no comprehens­ive processes or guidelines that manufactur­ers or brands must follow. So, there are no fixed recycling targets.

Interminis­terial consultati­ons are currently on to frame a broad-based policy on recycling, managing and disposing of single-use plastics, including stricter producer responsibi­lity, a second official said.

Following a series of consultati­ons last month, the govern

ment has asked industry associatio­ns, who together make up 80% of single-use plastic items sold, to establish a system that can be a working model for the whole of the country.

“There is no limit on how much plastic needs to be recycled but producers must have a system in place and get started immediatel­y,” the first official quoted above said.

Such a system needs to be evidence-based and quantifiab­le. The EPR guidelines that the government is working on will be fine-tuned according to evidence from the ground and what best suits the country, the official added.

There are two popular global models: one by the UN and another by the Organisati­on for Economic Co-operation and Developmen­t (OECD).

OECD, a club of 33 advanced economies, defines EPR as a “policy approach under which producers are given a significan­t responsibi­lity – financial or physical – for the treatment or disposal of post-consumer products”. Essentiall­y, under EPR, producers of plastics or brands bear the responsibi­lity for recycling or treating an amount of plastic that is equivalent to the total quantity they have sold in a given period, usually a year.

The UN and the European model, as the OCED framework is often called, lays down detailed mechanisms for countries to frame their EPR schemes. The UN framework refers to a manual for countries to adopt, which was updated during the so-called Basel Convention in 2016.

Both stress on the need for assigning, through national policy, “operationa­l” as well as “financial responsibi­lity” on producers for the plastic waste generated at the end of a product’s life cycle by setting targets. The European framework lays specific emphasis on “reducing the volume” or “toxicity of waste”, with the ultimate objective of “maximising social welfare”. Industry associatio­ns in India say they are in the process of ramping up producer responsibi­lity systems.

“The government has sought traceabili­ty of extended producer responsibi­lity and proof. We have just announced a ~1000crore joint venture, known as Karo Sambhav (make possible), to carry out EPR. We will report back to the government,” said Vimal Kedia, the president of PET Packaging Associatio­n.

The PET Packaging Associatio­n counts among its members some of India’s biggest companies that use PET packaging, such as Coca-Cola India Pvt Ltd, Dabur India Ltd and Reliance Industries Ltd, etc.

“We are expecting new EPR guidelines. We as an associatio­n have decided to undertake recycling or treating 30% of plastic sold and plan to increase it gradually,” said Deepak Ballani of the All India Plastic Manufactur­ers Associatio­n.

According to current rules, producers need to work out “modalities for waste collection system based on extended producers responsibi­lity and involving state urban developmen­t department­s, either individual­ly or collective­ly, through their own distributi­on channel or through the local body concerned”.

Environmen­tal experts say the Plastic Waste Management Rules 2016 do not lay down any enforceabl­e EPR guidelines. “In fact, we were expecting EPR by October 2. We have submitted to the government our own model framework. The sooner we have the guidelines the better,” said Dinesh Raj Bandela of the Centre for Science and Environmen­t.

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