The Hindu - International

India in favour of ‘regulating’, not banning, single-use plastic

- Jacob Koshy

Ahead of week-long negotiatio­ns involving 192 countries that are expected to begin in Toronto, Canada, next week on getting the globe to progress on eliminatin­g plastic pollution, India is in favour of “regulating”, and not eliminatin­g, single-use plastic, according to an analysis of various countries’ public negotiatin­g positions by the Centre for Science and Environmen­t (CSE), a not-for-pro t based in New Delhi.

In 2022, India brought into ešect the Plastic Waste Management Amendment Rules (2021) that banned 19 categories of ‘single-use plastics’.

‘Disposable goods’

These are de ned as disposable goods that are made with plastic but are generally use-and-throw after a single use and include plastic cups, spoons, earbuds, decorative thermocol, wrapping or packaging

lm used to cover sweet boxes and cigarette packets, and plastic cutlery. It, however, does not include plastic bottles – even those less than 200 ml— and multi-layered packaging boxes (such as milk cartons).

Moreover, even the single-use plastic items that are banned are not uniformly enforced nationally with several outlets continuing to retail these goods.

Of the nearly 17 topics that countries are expected to deliberate upon, one of them involves “problemati­c and avoidable plastic products including singleuse plastics”, which refer to sections of plastics that are likely to harm environmen­t as well as human health.

The aim of negotiatin­g countries is to implement global and national measures such as removing these products from the market, reducing production through alternativ­e practices or non-plastic substitute­s, and redesignin­g problemati­c items to meet criteria for sustainabl­e and safe product design.

The CSE analysis says that India, as of Saturday, has opted for language in the current version of the negotiatin­g document, called a ‘zero draft’, that vouches for “regulating” instead of “not allowing”, the production, sale, import and export of problemati­c and avoidable plastic goods. It has, however, agreed to “science-based criteria” for identifyin­g such plastics.

U.S. takes similar stand

The European Union (EU), for instance, has proposed that all countries restrict the making and selling of these categories of plastic. The United States also has a position closer to that of India and is not in favour of an outright stoppage of single use and avoidable plastics.

 ?? AFP ?? Complex challenge: The EU has proposed that all countries restrict the making and selling of avoidable plastic goods.
AFP Complex challenge: The EU has proposed that all countries restrict the making and selling of avoidable plastic goods.

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