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Single-Use Plastic Ban

Kartavya Desk Staff

Syllabus: Pollution

Source: TH

Context: Despite a 2016 ban under the Environment (Protection) Act, 1986, Karnataka continues to witness widespread use of single-use plastic (SUP) due to poor enforcement, illegal manufacturing, and weak civic participation.

About Single-use plastic ban:

Background & Context

First-Mover Advantage: Karnataka was India’s first state to ban SUP in 2016.

National Ban: The Union Government banned 19 categories of SUPs in 2022, including carry bags, thermocol, straws, cutlery, and banners.

Persistent Challenge: Inspections of 1.65 lakh establishments (2021–2024) seized 1,012 tonnes of banned plastic — but enforcement intensity dropped sharply in subsequent years.

Data & Trends:

Plastic Waste Generation: Karnataka produces 3.45–5.28 lakh tonnes annually (~1,000 tonnes/day).

Bengaluru’s Burden: 500 tonnes of SUP generated daily; only 40% is processed, rest ends up in landfills or water bodies.

Illegal Units: 300+ unregistered plastic producers operate in Bengaluru, using cheap granules and additives for high-profit margins (₹50–80/kg cost, sold at ₹300/kg).

Environmental & Health Hazards:

Microplastics in Food Chain: Plastics degrade into particles <5mm, infiltrating soil, crops, and water, eventually reaching humans.

Human Health Risks: Linked to inflammation, endocrine disruption, respiratory issues, hypothyroidism.

Ecosystem Damage: Microplastics disrupt microbial ecosystems, impacting soil fertility and aquatic life.

Animal Harm: Urban cattle, stray dogs ingest plastic, leading to fatal blockages and organ damage.

Ocean Pollution: UN estimates 2,000 truckloads of plastic enter oceans daily — contributing to the Great Pacific Garbage Patch.

Policy & Legal Framework:

Environment (Protection) Act, 1986: Enables bans on hazardous substances.

Plastic Waste Management Rules, 2016 & Amendments: Mandate Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) for producers, importers, brand owners.

EPR Portal: Tracks compliance, but enforcement remains weak — only 129 registered recyclers vs 1,200+ producers/importers.

Challenges in Implementation:

Enforcement Gaps: Raids dropped from 1.25 lakh (2022–23) to 18,000 (2024–25) due to shortage of field staff.

Shadow Economy: Illegal units thrive in Peenya, Dasarahalli, SP Road — easy availability of raw materials fuels production.

Consumer Behaviour: Public unaware or indifferent; demand driven by cheapness and convenience.

Recycling Infrastructure: Installed capacity under-utilised; segregation of waste remains poor.

Policy–Practice Gap: Focus on punitive action, not systemic waste segregation or circular economy incentives.

Way Forward:

Strengthen Enforcement:

• Dedicated anti-SUP task forces with GPS-enabled inspection and real-time reporting. Increase manpower in KSPCB & municipal bodies; mandate monthly reporting.

• Dedicated anti-SUP task forces with GPS-enabled inspection and real-time reporting.

• Increase manpower in KSPCB & municipal bodies; mandate monthly reporting.

Support Circular Economy:

• Incentivise alternatives (cloth, jute bags, biodegradable cutlery) through subsidies & GST concessions. Strict EPR compliance with penalties for non-collection.

• Incentivise alternatives (cloth, jute bags, biodegradable cutlery) through subsidies & GST concessions.

• Strict EPR compliance with penalties for non-collection.

Citizen Participation:

• Massive awareness drives in schools, RWAs, markets. Promote BYOB (Bring Your Own Bag) campaigns and reward zero-waste businesses.

• Massive awareness drives in schools, RWAs, markets.

• Promote BYOB (Bring Your Own Bag) campaigns and reward zero-waste businesses.

Urban Governance Reform:

• Integrate waste segregation into Swachh Bharat & Smart City projects. Decentralised Material Recovery Facilities (MRFs) at ward level.

• Integrate waste segregation into Swachh Bharat & Smart City projects.

• Decentralised Material Recovery Facilities (MRFs) at ward level.

Technology & Innovation:

• Use AI & IoT for waste tracking, microplastic detection, and real-time pollution alerts. Fund startups working on biodegradable packaging and plastic-to-fuel innovations.

• Use AI & IoT for waste tracking, microplastic detection, and real-time pollution alerts.

• Fund startups working on biodegradable packaging and plastic-to-fuel innovations.

Conclusion:

The ban on SUP remains a paper tiger unless backed by robust enforcement, behavioural change, and circular economy incentives. Karnataka’s experience underlines the need for a national mission-mode approach to tackle plastic menace — integrating law, technology, community, and markets. Sustainable alternatives must be made affordable so that India can truly achieve Plastic-Free 2047 under the spirit of LiFE (Lifestyle for Environment).

AI-assisted content, editorially reviewed by Kartavya Desk Staff.

About Kartavya Desk Staff

Articles in our archive published before our editorial team was expanded. Legacy content is periodically reviewed and updated by our current editors.

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