Tuesday, May 13, 2025
  • About Us
  • Our Team
  • Advertise With Us
  • Submission Policy
  • Fund Raising
Daily Good Morning Kashmir
  • Home
  • Latest
  • GMK WebTV
  • Opinion
    • Editorial
    • Book Excerpt
  • KashmirTrending
  • Jammu
  • India
  • Asia
  • International
  • Education
Today’s e-Paper
  • Home
  • Latest
  • GMK WebTV
  • Opinion
    • Editorial
    • Book Excerpt
  • KashmirTrending
  • Jammu
  • India
  • Asia
  • International
  • Education
No Result
View All Result
Daily Good Morning Kashmir
Today’s e-Paper
Home Opinion

Need to ban single-use plastic

Priyanka Saurabh by Priyanka Saurabh
June 29, 2022
in Opinion
0
Smart City: Srinagar to get reverse vending machines for managing solid plastic
0
SHARES
15
VIEWS
v

Although compostable, biodegradable, or even edible plastics are promoted as alternatives from various materials such as bagasse (residue after extracting juice from sugarcane), corn starch, and cereal flour, these are currently being scaled and there are cost limits.

Single-use plastic refers to those plastic items that are used once and discarded. The highest usage of plastics manufactured and used in single-use plastics ranges from the packaging of goods to bottles, polythene bags, food packaging, etc. It accounts for a third of all plastic produced globally, of which 98% is made from fossils.

Related posts

Sir-Syed-Memorial-GMK

Sir Syed Memorial Edu Institute: A Beacon of Enlightenment in South Kashmir

May 10, 2025
Mothers Day-GMK

Int’l Mothers Day – Honouring Mothers

May 10, 2025
WhatsApp Group Join Now

India is committed to taking action to reduce pollution caused by single-use plastic littering. In line with the clarion call given by PM Narendra Modi to eliminate single-use plastic by 2022, the Plastic Waste Management Amendment Rules 2021 are notified, which prohibit the use of single-use plastics with low utility and high litter potential by 2022. puts. The government notification has banned the manufacture, sale, and use of identified single-use plastic items such as plates, cups, straws, trays, and polystyrene with effect from July 1, 2022.

Directions have been issued by the Center concerning the ban on single-use plastics, under which the manufacture, import, stocking, distribution, sale, and use of single-use plastics including polystyrene and expanded polystyrene, items are prohibited with effect from July 1, 2022. Will go

From December, polythene bags of less than 120 microns will also be banned. While manufacturers can use the same machine for 50- and 75-micron bags, machinery will need to be upgraded for 120-micron bags. On the demand side, instructions have been issued to e-commerce companies, major single-use plastic sellers/users, and plastic raw material manufacturers to phase out identified single-use plastic items.

Directives have been issued at the national, state, and local levels to curb the supply of identified items. For example, not all major petrochemical industries supply plastic raw materials to industries engaged in restricted SUP production.

Plastic bags pollute land and water because they are lightweight, plastic materials can travel long distances by air and water. When plastic remains in the environment for a long time and does not decompose, it turns into microplastic – first entering our food sources and then the human body.

The production of plastic materials is very energy-intensive. They require a lot of water for their production. Being non-recyclable, plastic bags end up in the oceans. When they arrive, they break into smaller pieces and are eaten by wildlife. Which can cause health problems or even death. Many animals also get stuck in plastic bags.

Toxic chemicals released from plastic bags that are harmful to human health can damage blood and tissues. Repeated exposure can lead to cancer, birth defects, impaired immunity, hormone changes, endocrine disruption, and other serious diseases.

While the production model of plastics is huge and unregulated, the number of recycling plants is very small. In such a situation, a ban on single-use plastic will help. The government should educate the public and business bodies to reap the benefits of the ban.

At present, consumer awareness about the negative effects of single-use plastic waste is still limited. This needs to be further strengthened through communication, strategic planning, and consumer awareness campaigns. This will not only improve environmental awareness among citizens but will also empower and encourage wider action.

Promoting alternatives like cotton, khadi bags, and bio-degradable plastics. Provide economic incentives to encourage the adoption of environmentally friendly and purpose-appropriate alternatives that do not cause much harm. Support may include tax exemptions, research and development funding, technology incubation, public-private partnerships, and support to projects that reuse single-use items and turn waste into a resource that can then be reused. can be used from.

Reducing or eliminating taxes on imports of materials used to make substitutes. Provide incentives to the industry by introducing tax exemptions or other conditions to support your transition. Governments will face resistance from the plastics industry, including importers and distributors of plastic packaging. Give them time to adapt. Although compostable, biodegradable, or even edible plastics are promoted as alternatives from various materials such as bagasse (residue after extracting juice from sugarcane), corn starch, and grain flour, these are currently limited in scale and cost. has limits.

In the absence of robust testing and certification to verify the claims made by producers in India, counterfeit biodegradable and compostable plastics are entering the market. In January this year, the CPCB said that 12 companies were marketing carry bags and products marked as ‘compostable’ without any certification, and asked the respective state pollution control boards to take action against these units.

Use revenue collected from taxes or levies on single-use plastics to maximize the public interest. Support environmental projects or promote local recycling with funds. Create jobs in the plastic recycling sector with seed funding. Implement the chosen measure effectively, by ensuring a clear allocation of roles and responsibilities.

The success of imposing plastic bag fees has also been established in cities such as Chicago and Washington, showing that such interventions can be effective in shaping behavior change. The European Union is considering new laws to ban some everyday single-use plastic products, including straws, cutlery, and plates, citing plastic litter in the ocean as prompting action.

Countries such as the U.S., Canada, and the Netherlands have already enacted regulations to prevent the use of microbeads in personal care products. The sooner India adopts such rules, the better; Picking up litter while jogging or jogging was started on a small scale in a small part of Stockholm about a year ago, it has spread all over the world and India can also adopt it.

The author is Research Scholar in Political Science. She can be mailed at writer@drsatywansaurabh.com

Priyanka Saurabh
Priyanka Saurabh

Author is a Research Scholar, Poetess, Independent Journalist and Columnist. She can be reached at priyankasaurabh201292@gmail.com

Tags: BanGood Morning KashmirhealthOpinionPlasticRecycle
Previous Post

Hot, dry weather likely to continue in J&K

Next Post

Adverse effects of modern technology

Related Posts

Sir-Syed-Memorial-GMK
Opinion

Sir Syed Memorial Edu Institute: A Beacon of Enlightenment in South Kashmir

May 10, 2025
Mothers Day-GMK
Opinion

Int’l Mothers Day – Honouring Mothers

May 10, 2025
lauchpicture. GMK
Opinion

Conflicts and crises intensify the need for gender equality and health equity

May 9, 2025
Teachers and Students GMK
Opinion

Revisiting the Sacred Bond: Restoring Respect Between Teachers and Students

May 9, 2025
operation Sindoor
Opinion

Operation Sindoor: India’s decisive action against terrorism

May 9, 2025
Brutality-GMK
Opinion

Silence is Complicity: Lessons from Nishat’s Brutality

May 7, 2025
Next Post
Adverse effects of modern technology

Adverse effects of modern technology

Discussion about this post

BROWSE BY CATEGORIES

  • Adventurous
  • Asia
  • Book Excerpt
  • Breaking News
  • Business
  • Culture
  • Editorial
  • Education
  • Entertainment and Arts
  • Fashion
  • Health and Fitness
  • History
  • India
  • International
  • Jammu
  • Kashmir
  • Ladakh
  • Latest
  • Lifestyle
  • National
  • News
  • Opinion
  • People Calling
  • Poem
  • Politics
  • Region
  • Sports
  • Tech and Gadgets
  • Technology
  • Travel
  • Travel and Tour
  • Videos
  • World

BROWSE BY TOPICS

Accident Army Arrested Attack Baramulla Budgam Cases China Coronavirus Covid death deaths Editorial Education Good Morning Kashmir Gunfight health Highway India injured Jammu JK Kashmir killed Kupwara Latest LG LG Manoj Sinha MeT Militant militants News Opinion Pakistan People Calling Police Politics Road Snowfall Sports Srinagar Students Tourism Weather Youth

POPULAR NEWS

  • srinagar airport

    All roads lead to Kashmir: Srinagar Airport jam-packed, operates 94 flights everyday

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Jammu- B’la Rail Link: Path to prosperity

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Kashmir sizzles: Srinagar, Anantnag, Ganderbal register record temperatures

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • J-K Govt to fill over 12,000 vacancies to tackle unemployment

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • MeT predicts snowfall in Kashmir

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
Daily Good Morning Kashmir

Good Morning Kashmir is a media house started in 2010 by a group of Professional Communicators, it has come a long way, both in terms of the quality of its contents and reach.

Follow us on social media:

Download Our Mobile App For Latest News Updates

WhatsApp Group Join Image
  • About Us
  • Advertise With Us
  • Contact Us
  • Fund Raising
  • Home
  • Our Team
  • Privacy Policy
  • Refund Policy
  • Submission Policy

© 2022 Daily Good Morning Kashmir - Designed & Developed by Gigfolioo Technologies.

  • Home
  • Latest
  • GMK WebTV
  • Opinion
    • Editorial
    • Book Excerpt
  • Kashmir
  • Jammu
  • India
  • Asia
  • International
  • Education

© 2022 Daily Good Morning Kashmir - Designed & Developed by Gigfolioo Technologies.