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4 single-use plastic products likely to be banned nation-wide

Written by  Nimrat Kaur -- September 29th 2018 12:21 PM -- Updated: September 29th 2018 01:37 PM
4 single-use plastic products likely to be banned nation-wide

4 single-use plastic products likely to be banned nation-wide

4 single-use plastic products likely to be banned nation-wide Styrofoam cups, plastic water bottles, disposable plastic cutlery and all plastic carry bags are more than just likely to be banned nationwide by the union environment ministry. Single-use plastic meant for packaging will not be covered by the legislation. The ministry has also written to all states to come up with their own policy or guidelines for immediate crashing out of these products. Prime Minister Narendra Modi was recently conferred the “champions of the earth” award by the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) for pledging to eliminate all single-use plastic by 2022 and for leading the International Solar Alliance. The award will be handed to him by UN officials on October 3. “A central legislation is being worked on but the country has to be prepared for it. States have to be on board. Plastic bags or thin plastic bags have been either partially or fully banned in 22 states. Maharashtra has the strongest legislation. Sikkim is also implementing the ban on plastic bags well. We have seen promising results in Jharkhand and Madhya Pradesh as well,” said a senior environment ministry official from the hazardous substances management division who is familiar with the developments. The Maharashtra Plastic and Thermocol (manufacture, usage, sale, transport, handling, and storage) Products Notification, which restricts plastic bags and cutlery as well as plastic packaging, was notified in March 2018. 4 single-use plastic products likely to banned nation-wide The central legislation may be on the lines of the Maharashtra notification. “We have written to all ministries and government departments to voluntarily phase out these four items,” the official said. “For now, we are asking people not to use packaged water as a culture. It may not be banned altogether,” the official added. Ravi Agarwal, director of Toxics Link, said a phaseout may not have much impact unless it also covers plastic packaging. “We need a packaging legislation.”


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