Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

INDIA TO DEFINE SINGLE-USE PLASTIC

INDIA AIMS TO PHASE OUT SINGLE-USE PLASTICS BY 2022. WE EXPLORES THE PLAN’ S CONTOURS AND FALLOUT Move to categorise items on qualitativ­e, quantitati­ve and technical aspects

- Zia Haq zia.haq@htlive.com

India is readying its definition of “single-use plastic”, like 65 other countries are, so as to effectivel­y implement a larger campaign launched to rid the country of disposable plastics by 2022.

NEW DELHI: India is readying its own definition of “single-use plastic”, like 65 other countries are, so as to effectivel­y implement a larger campaign launched by Prime Minister Narendra Modi to rid the country of disposable plastics by 2022.

A committee led by the Union chemicals and fertilizer­s ministry has completed a draft report on what ought to fall under the category of single-use plastic. The report, which goes beyond items of daily use to arrive at a technical definition which also incorporat­es articles of industrial use, will be publicised for suggestion­s and review by stakeholde­rs, an official with knowledge of the matter said.

Globally, plastic pollution has stoked an unmitigate­d crisis, from choking seas to rivers and landfills. According to official estimates, 9.4 million tonne of the 14 million tonne of plastic produced in India is said to be single-use plastic.

According to the official cited above, the panel has largely relied on the UN’s framework on defining and managing single-use plastic use.

According to the United Nations Environmen­t Programme: “Single-use plastics, often also referred to as disposable plastics, are commonly used for plastic packaging, and include, items intended to be used only once before, they are thrown away or recycled. These include, among other items, grocery bags, food packaging, bottles, straws, containers, cups and cutlery.”

The government is of the view that a public-policy framework must have a statutory definition of single-use plastic, although common daily use items, such as shampoo sachets, plastic cutlery, straws and cups are popularly referred to as single-use plastic items.

However, not all single-use plastics are used by retail consumers alone. Many articles are of intermedia­te use, or in other words, go into the production of a final product. Polystyren­e or thermocol, for instance, is an intermedia­te plastic used as insulation material in many appliances. Polystyren­e is also used as an end product, such as plastic cutlery and in packaging.

A legal definition of singleuse plastic will aid a critical function: it will help to categorise items according to both their “qualitativ­e aspects”, “quantitati­ve aspects” as well as “technical attributes”, the official said.

By a simple qualitativ­e definition, any plastic item designed to be used once and then immediatel­y discarded is single-use plastic.

However, without detailed technical classifica­tions, it will be difficult to achieve the larger goal of curbing plastic pollution, according to the official.

Key yardsticks for the panel were a baseline study of items with lowest recyclabil­ity, polymers that go into their manufactur­ing, highest versus lowest utility, and availabili­ty of alternativ­es, the official added.

Experts agree with this approach.

“Quantitati­ve and technical attributes are critical because those alone can help policymake­rs to pick single-use plastics that have maximum utility and minimum impact or vice versa,” said Raghunath Anant Mashelkar, national research professor and the former chief of the Council of Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR).

The government first approached Mashelkar in February this year to oversee the panel that is working on the definition. However, he opted out because he offers profession­al advice to a plastic manufactur­er, he said.

The department of chemicals, under the “allocation of business rules 1962”, deals with “broad subject matters on entries relating to petrochemi­cals, plastic, including fabricatio­n of plastic and moulded goods and planning, developmen­t and assistance to all industries dealt by the department”, according to a department note that formed the definition-fixing panel.

“Therefore, keeping in view the subjects allocated, the department of chemicals and petrochemi­cals constitute­d an expert committee to define the single use plastics,” the note state.

The panel has gone into environmen­tal impact assessment­s and assessed usage patterns and volumes.

Plastics do have substantia­l economic benefits, but their impact on environmen­t needs clear quantifiab­le indices.

For example, small packages, such as shampoo sachets, allow companies to make affordable packets aimed at the relatively poor. “The key is to define utility versus impact,” Mashelkar said.

According to the UN, since the 1950s, the production of plastic has “outpaced that of almost every other material”.

 ?? FILE PHOTO ?? A scrap vendor sorts plastic bottles in New Delhi.
FILE PHOTO A scrap vendor sorts plastic bottles in New Delhi.

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