The Hindu (Kolkata)

Mountains of plastic are choking the Himalayan States

- Archana Vaidya Vikram Hegde is an advocate in the Supreme Court of India

Empowering local bodies and creating the necessary infrastruc­ture for waste management in the Indian Himalayan Region need immediate attention

Plastic is ubiquitous everywhere, from the top of the highest mountain to the deepest of trenches in the ocean. It is found even inside the human lungs and placenta. Microplast­ics are formed by the degradatio­n and the fragmentat­ion of large plastic pieces that are improperly disposed of. Microplast­ic deposition and accumulati­on has been found in the Himalayan mountains, rivers, lakes and streams. These microplast­ics can be trapped in glaciers for a long time and released into rivers during snow melting. The Indian Himalayan Region is a critical source of water in the subcontine­nt, feeding a number of major rivers of India that include the Indus, Ganges and Brahmaputr­a river systems. Unscientif­ic plastic disposal is causing soil and water pollution in the Indian Himalayan Region and impacting its biodiversi­ty, which is having an adverse impact on the fresh water sources that communitie­s downstream depend on.

Rapid and unplanned urbanisati­on and changing production and consumptio­n patterns are responsibl­e for the plastic waste crisis in the Indian Himalayan Region. A quantum jump in tourist footfalls is another reason for exacerbati­on of the problem. A recent report by the Social Developmen­t for Communitie­s (SDC) Foundation Dehradun highlighti­ng the plight of towns in Uttarakhan­d drowning in plastic waste is no surprise — almost all the mountain States face a similar situation. Recently, the National Green Tribunal issued notices to the Ministry of Environmen­t, Forest and Climate Change, the Central Pollution Control Board (CPCB), the Himachal Pradesh State Pollution Control Board, the Deputy Commission­er Lahaul and Spiti and the Panchayat of Koksar in Himachal Pradesh on waste dumping in ecosensiti­ve areas by tourists and commercial establishm­ents. In Assam, at the Ramsar site of Deepor Beel, Greater adjutant storks have been feasting on the plastic waste in the landfill instead of fish from the wetland. In Manipur, growing pollution in rivers, that include the Nambul, has been widely reported. The Himalayan Clean up (201821) that was conducted by the Integrated Mountain Initiative with Zero Waste Himalayas) and the National Productivi­ty Council of India’s waste and brand audit show increasing plastic waste, especially nonrecycla­bles, in the Indian Himalayan Region. The Himalayan Clean up (2022) waste audit results showed that 92.7% of trash was plastic, with 72% of waste being nonrecycla­ble plastic.

Plastic waste versus management capacities

Every year, there is a day when the amount of plastic waste surpasses the capability of waste management systems to manage this. Environmen­t Action, a Swissbased organisati­on, calls it Plastic Overshoot Day. In 2023, India reached its plastic overshoot day on January 6, is a Natural Resource Management (NRM) and Environmen­t Law consultant and an advocate at the High Court of

Himachal Pradesh which is shocking especially as the EPR portal of CPCB claims that there is a systemic ability to deal with plastic waste. India has one of the highest mismanaged waste index (MWI), at 98.55%, in the world (after Kenya, Nigeria and Mozambique) which is the gap in waste management capacity and plastic consumptio­n. The Government of India claims that it recycles 60% of plastic waste. In statistica­l analysis done by the Centre for Science and Environmen­t (CSE) using CPCB data, India is merely recycling (through mechanical recycling) 12% of its plastic waste. Close to 20% of this waste is channelise­d for endoflife solutions such as coincinera­tion, plastictof­uel and road making, which means we are burning 20% of our plastic waste and still calling it ‘recycling’ and when 68% of plastic waste is unaccounte­d for.

Legal mandate for waste management

Solid Waste Management Rules (SWM) 2016, Plastic Waste Management (PWM) Rules 2016 and Extended Producer Responsibi­lity (EPR) 2022 constitute the regulatory framework for plastic waste management for India (at the country level). Special needs of hill areas are recognised by the SWM but are not factored in while creating a mandate for both local bodies and producers, importers and brand owners (PIBOs), while PWM and EPR have not even recognised the special needs of the hills.

States across the Indian Himalayan Region have also been taking various initiative­s including enacting laws to curb this menace. Himachal Pradesh and Sikkim have special State laws banning the use of plastics. Himachal Pradesh has a buy back policy for nonrecycla­ble and singleuse plastic waste since 2019, but there is still widespread littering of plastic waste. Sikkim banned packaged mineral water use from January 2022 and has a fairly robust regulatory system, but in the absence of proper infrastruc­ture to handle plastic waste, the State is still grappling with the issue. Mizoram has been proactive on the regulatory front — the Aizawal Municipal Corporatio­n made bylaws under the PWM in 2019. Tripura has made policy changes, enacted municipal bylaws and has a Statelevel task force to eliminate Single Use Plastic though the results are not visible.The collective mandate of SWM/PWM/EPR requires waste segregatio­n at source. Segregatio­n of not only plastic from other waste but also different types of plastics is a prerequisi­te for any strategy to dispose of plastic waste in a scientific and sustainabl­e manner. Waste segregatio­n exists on paper, but a closer look shows landfills overflowin­g with mixed waste. The leachate from the mixed waste causes soil and groundwate­r pollution while fumes from such mixed waste cause air pollution. A huge amount of plastic waste which can be recycled still remains in landfills.

Under the SWM, PWM and EPR, the task of waste management from collection to its scientific disposal is the duty of local bodies. They can take help from PIBOs for the setting up and operationa­lisation of the plastic waste management system, as mandated under the EPR. Though local bodies are the pivot of the waste management system in the country, a commensura­te devolution of power to them is still work in progress. Very few States have enacted model bylaws and very few local bodies themselves have made bylaws to operationa­lise the mandate. There is no clarity regarding the mandate to ensure collaborat­ion between local bodies and PIBOs. There is a need to include traditiona­l institutio­ns within the definition of local bodies when it comes to the Indian Himalayan Region (prevalent in many States in the northeast). It is important to note that under Swachh Bharat Mission (SBM) and the Fifteenth Finance Commission, money was allocated to these traditiona­l institutio­ns.

Plugging data gaps is one step

There is a need for appropriat­e resource allocation and support that is considerat­e of and reflective of the rich biodiversi­ty, ecological sensitivit­y and fragility of the Indian Himalayan Region, besides taking into account the specific geographic­al challenges of mountain waste management. Empowering local bodies and creating the necessary infrastruc­ture for waste management need immediate attention. Segregatio­n of waste and the participat­ion of the people in this endeavour with the help of sustained public education campaigns are a sine qua non. Geographic­al neutrality of targets under the EPR could be countered if the higher cost of EPR operationa­lisation in the mountain region is given its due considerat­ion. The value of the EPR certificat­e which is earned by a PIBO in the

Indian Himalayan Region could be higher than one earned in the rest of the country for every ton of plastic waste processed.

Data gaps in terms of the quantum and quality of waste being generated in the Indian Himalayan Region States should be plugged. Convergenc­e in existing schemes such as SBM, the Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Act and the Finance Commission’s grants could be used to create the infrastruc­ture, maintain and run operations. The Swachh Bharat Kosh Trust set up to facilitate the channelisa­tion of philanthro­pic contributi­ons and corporate social responsibi­lity funds towards this cause could also be used to augment resources. The Atal Mission for Rejuvenati­on and Urban Transforma­tion (AMRUT) and Smart Cities Scheme under which many cities in the Indian Himalayan Region are selected, could also work in convergenc­e on the issue of scientific waste management and making cities in the Indian Himalayan Region free of plastic.

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