The Borneo Post (Sabah)

India’s most populous state bans plastic, yet again

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NEW DELHI: India’s most populous state Uttar Pradesh, home to 220 million people, announced a ban on plastic cups and polythene use from July 15, in its third such attempt.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi has pledged to make India free of single-use plastic by 2022, and the majority of India’s 29 states have a full or partial ban.

However the law is rarely enforced, and Uttar Pradesh’s previous two attempts since 2015 have failed because local authoritie­s refused to implement it, even after court orders.

“We have decided to impose a complete ban on plastic in the state from July 15,” the chief minister of Uttar Pradesh, Yogi Adityanath, said on Twitter.

“I urge everyone to stop use of plastic cup, glass and polythene after July 15. I seek your support to make the ban a success,” he said.

Details of the proposed ban have yet to be announced, however.

Like in other Indian states, plastic pollution has been a major contributo­r to pollution of Uttar Pradesh’s rivers, and urban areas are often strewn with plastic bags and bottles.

The Indian government had also declared the area around the Taj Mahal, which is in the state, a plastic-free zone.

Last month, a ban on singleuse plastics came into force in the 110-million-strong state of Maharashtr­a, home to India’s commercial capital Mumbai.

It covers their manufactur­e, usage, transport, distributi­on, wholesale and retail sale, storage as well as import.

Some 250 officials, wearing blue uniforms and dubbed Mumbai’s ‘anti-plastic squad’, have been deployed to carry out inspection­s of restaurant­s and shops in Mumbai.

However there has been considerab­le confusion and lobbying efforts, reportedly including from multinatio­nal companies, have succeeded in watering down the regulation­s.

India generates around 5.6 million tonnes of plastic waste annually, according to government figures. Plastic has also been found inside dead cows in India.

A United Nations report warned that at current levels the planet could be awash with 12 billion tonnes of plastic trash by the middle of the century. — AFP

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