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Only 3%, or 200,000 metric tonnes, of the total amount of plastics consumed in the nation are single-use plastics, according to Vijay Kumar, president of the Karnataka State Polymer Association.

Digital Desk: Between September 2019 and June 2022, the Bruhat Bengaluru Mahanagara Palike (BBMP) seized nearly 7,300 cases of single-use plastic (SUP), valued at 1.14 crore, according to officials with knowledge of the situation.

The crackdown, according to BBMP officials, is a "continuous process" being carried out throughout the state capital, which is home to over 12 million people and is infamous for having some of the worst recycling facilities because the majority of this plastic ends up in water bodies or on street corners.

"Anything considered single-use (plastic) is prohibited. Dr. Trilok Chandra, the special commissioner for health at BBMP, said there is no quantification in the traditional sense.

Chandra stated that the government organization is focusing on both the producers of single-use plastics and all businesses that use them.

The BBMP has also taken the lead in a campaign to stop plastics from other states from entering Karnataka.

Despite the product's ban since 2016, usage of single-use plastic increased during the Covid-19 pandemic, when restaurants and other businesses were compelled to rely on it to serve customers out of fear that they would have to share steel cutlery and plates.

On July 1, the Union government implemented a ban on single-use plastic products, such as wrapping or packaging films, plastic cutlery, straws, and plastic sticks for balloons and earbuds.

According to a statement released by the government on June 28, 19 items on this list are prohibited. These include stirrers, plastic plates, cups, and glasses, as well as cutlery such as forks, spoons, knives, straws, trays, wrapping or packaging films around candy boxes, balloon sticks made of plastic, plastic sticks for balloons, plastic flags, candy sticks, and ice-cream sticks.

Only 3%, or 200,000 metric tonnes, of the total amount of plastics consumed in the nation are single-use plastics, according to Vijay Kumar, president of the Karnataka State Polymer Association.

According to him, India's per-capita plastic consumption will likely rise by 20–23% in the near future from its current level of 11–13 kg, HT reported on July 5.

The civic organization has stepped up implementation throughout the city following the announcement by the Indian government that all single-use plastic items would be completely banned as of July 1. The BBMP reportedly seized 122.3 kg of single-use plastic from 98 locations in the city on Saturday alone, and a fine of 77,100 was also collected that day. Manufacturers, retailers, and small-business vendors who depend on single-use plastic for their daily business are among the offenders.

 

 

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