KSPCB submits action plan to GOI, new inclusions made under ban
Chandana S., a resident of south Bengaluru, was buying groceries recently when she noticed thin plastic bags being given away at will by shopkeepers. She questioned one of them about the plastic ban in place. “The shopkeeper said if he does not give away bags, he will lose customers. Only a few people carry their own bags,” she said.
With COVID-19 bringing sweeping changes to the way we live, overshadowing everything else since 2020, plastic – including the banned kind – has surely and visibly made a comeback. Citizens from various parts of the city have highlighted the need to bring back enforcement, which, they say, had borne considerable yields before the pandemic struck.
For instance, Parveen Sultana, a resident of Yelahanka, recalled how before the pandemic, the local butcher would not even pack meat in plastic packs “I remember having to carry my own as they would pack it in a paper bag,” she said.
New additions
The Karnataka State Pollution Control Board (KSPCB), in a public notice on March 7, said as per Rule 4 (2) of the Plastic Waste Management Rules, 2016 (as amended), the manufacture, import, stocking, distribution, sale and use of single use plastics (SUPs) such as ear buds with plastic sticks, plastic sticks for balloons, plastic flags, candy sticks, polystyrene for decoration, plates, cups, glasses, cutlery, wrapping and packing films around sweet boxes, invitation cards and cigarette packets, and plastic or PVC banners less than 100 microns would be prohibited from July 1….ReadMore