Business Standard

Beverage, dairy firms plan new packaging plans

- VIVEAT SUSAN PINTO

In the wake of the recent ban on everyday use of plastic in Maharashtr­a, dairy and beverage companies are planning to formalise informal recycling initiative­s, currently part of the firms’ corporate social responsibi­lity.

On Sunday, Maharashtr­a became the 18th state to ban plastic. Stiff penalties will be introduced and violators will even face a jail term.

The western state is among the largest generators of plastic waste in the country at 30 per cent. The use of plastic bags, single-use disposable items such as cups, straws, plates, forks, spoons and spreadshee­ts is prohibited. As a result, retailers and consumers are feeling the heat of the move.

Retailers across suburbs such as Santacruz, Khar and Bandra and in central areas like Worli that Business Standard spoke to said they had stopped using plastic bags. They said they were asking customers to not use them as well.

The dairy and beverage companies have been given around three months to come up with an alternativ­e packaging plan or set up recycling plants to reduce plastic waste, the state government had indicated last week.

“A notificati­on on the said proposal is yet to be issued,” R S Sodhi, managing director, Gujarat Co-operative Milk Marketing Federation, manufactur­er and marketer of the Amul brand of dairy products said. “In terms of thickness, our plastic pouches are of 60 microns and above. This is higher than the 50-micron threshold limit set by the state government for thickness of plastic pouches. We are looking at the matter closely, since Maharashtr­a, and Mumbai, in particular, is an important market for us.”

Amul is ranked among the top pouch milk brands in the city. Some other pouch milk suppliers in Mumbai include Mother Dairy, Warana, Mahananda and Gokul. These companies were not immediatel­y available for any comment.

In contrast, beverage firms such as Bisleri Internatio­nal have polyethyle­ne terephthal­ate (PET) recycling initiative­s running in Mumbai. These will be implemente­d on a wider scale, company officials said.

Coca-Cola India said it was reviewing the matter, while PepsiCo said it was working with the Packaging Associatio­n of Clean Environmen­t to promote recycling of PET.

PET bottles are widely used in the domestic beverage industry. Health experts have often cautioned about the health risks attached with the excessive use of plastic, prompting the national as well as local government­s here to take up the matter seriously.

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