Vinyl bags are washed, dried and recycled in India. World Resources Institute / Flickr / CC BY-NC-SA 0
India's Maharashtra State - Includes Mumbai's fast-growing densely populated capital - weekend is forbidden from disposable plastic in Jeonju
The contract was first introduced on March 23 and prohibits the manufacture, use, sale, distribution and storage of plastic food bags, cutlery, plates, PET and PETE bottles, and foam takeaway containers. The provincial government provided the company three months to dispose of existing stock
Aditya Thackeray, the leader of the Shibsena Party, is the key to promoting the ban and calls the new policy a "historical step" for environmental protection.
Maharashtra State is currently the 18th state of the country that places a plastic ban. According to NDTV, the state produces 1200 tons of plastic waste per day, Mumbai produces 500 tons of plastic waste per day, accounting for about 10% of its total waste.
NDTV said that the majority of this plastic eventually occluded the drain pipe and caused seawater to seep out, causing serious marine pollution around Mumbai.
However, the new rules have undergone several adjustments. The Indian Times reported that citizens and suppliers would not be willing to adapt to the ban, but found no affordable alternatives. Some city inspectors are also confused by the banned specifications and have been fined for permitted items.
Plastic contamination is a major problem in India. Approximately 25,000 tons of plastic waste is generated annually in India, and its recovery rate is only 60%. Therefore, the country has taken measures to combat plastic contamination at the regional level.
Earlier this month, Prime Minister Narendra Modi of India announced plans to eliminate all disposable plastics by 2022.
According to UN Plastics' report, the regional ban has been successful in various degrees. Among the 10 regional bans listed in the report, the two bans Himachal Pradesh and Sikkim achieved moderate to moderate results, but the four bans, including the New Delhi ban, had almost four impacts It does not give. Prohibition has been evaluated due to limited data
The Mumbai ban is part of the global trend restricting the use of plastics, especially plastic bags and other disposable items. However, the dramatic intervention in the city seems to be a lesson on how to implement a plastic ban. Restrictions were announced three months before it went into effect and were hardly advertised by the deadline of June 23 and no upgrades were made. Not doing the previous ban also made people cynical. Large enterprises have not even appeared in the initial meeting of the government committee dealing with this issue.
This announcement is based on the manufacture, supply, storage and use of state-specific banned plastics already existing in at least 25 of the 29 provinces in the country. Recently, on 23rd June, Mumbai became the largest city in the country, as part of a state-wide ban in Maharashtra State, implementing a comprehensive ban on disposable plastic from plastic bags to bottles and dishes . This prohibition permits exemptions from retail packaging, trash can lining and takeaway packaging, and further concessions on Saturday bans, depending on enterprise pressure
Mumbai was looking for sources of information when I cleaned up garbage at Mumbai beach: Mumbai banned the use of plastic bags, polystyrene foams, take-out containers, and dishes in Maharashtra, the capital of India. The goal is to do so in all countries of India by 2022. Municipalities in India and other states and around the world prohibit the use of disposable plastic bags, but the ban on Maharashtra State is one of the most influential bans. The state government issued detailed guidelines on legitimate and otherwise. Plastic medicine bottles and waterproof sheets are available; there are no more plastic colored wreaths that often decorate Hindu temples.
With the advent of studies on the environmental impact of plastic bags, many cities have begun to limit the use of disposable plastic bags, through fines and other policies. The first American city that acted was in San Francisco, banning the use of thin plastic bags in 2007 and then adding a 10 cents tote bag. In 2014, a law prohibiting the use of disposable plastic bags for food and medicines across California was passed. Dozens of cities and counties followed this.