For the first time in the history of India,
any city had almost 40 inches (1000 mm) of incessant
rains just in about 1 day. This happened in the
city on Mumbai, where majority of th e1000 mm
fell in just 3-4 hours in the afternoon. This
should be considered as natural calamity. Besides
it was high tide and water could not flow in the
sea. Instead all the roads and the other ground
surface were under a few feet of water disrupting
the life of Mumbai city. How can a city remain
unaffected when so intense rain fell in the time
period of less than 4 hours and that too at the
time of high tide. Then why do you single out
plastic bags as the primary reason for the choking
of drains. We strongly believe that the Government
is making the poor plastic bags as "scapegoat".
As a response to the flooding of Mumbai
after the incessant rains on 26th July 2005, the
Government of Maharashtra plans to ban the use
of plastic bags in the state of Maharashtra. We
must say that this response is completely unbelievable
and that too cin a state where almost 1 million
tons of various types of plastic products are
manufactured. Is the Government, instead of working
on the fundamental problem of water logging, putting
all blames on plastic bags. While we agree that
plastic bags and the other plastic products end
up in the drains because of bad littering habits,
can we blame plastic products alone for the water
logging? By the proposed ban
on plastic bags, the Government of Maharashtra
is charting a detrimental course.
About 60 million tons of plastic is used in the
packaging sector out of the total of about 170
million tons consumed in the World. India consumes
only 4.5 million tons and therefore is a very
small user of plastics in the World. While our
population is more than 16% our share of plastic
consumption is merely 4.5%. This banning will
hamper the growth of plastic in our country and
more so in Maharashtra state which has almost
25% share of the total plastic consumption. It
would have seriousl adverse implications on the
life of a common man. Plastics, due to their relatively
higher cost efficiency, benefits ordinary citizens
in sourcing their daily necessities in convenient
and unadulterated form and at a fraction of the
cost as compared to paper, glass or cloth. Use
of alternative materials would result in substantial
increase in packaging cost of milk, edible oil,
bread, cereals, pulses, spices, confectionery
items, toiletry products and a host of other items
used by common man and may even push some of these
products beyond the reach of poorer section of
the society apart from creating higher impact
on the environment. Milk packaging consumes almost
70 KT of plastic bags in India. By banning the
use of bags in milk packaging and switching to
glass or paper packaging, milk will become more
expensive at least to the extent of Rs.5/liter.
Secondly the best alternate mode of packaging
is either in HDPE plastic bottle or of tetrapack
which has Polyethylene coating. Both these alternatives
would increase the burden to the common mass.
Plastic as a material is one of the most beneficial
to the public at large. It has proven its worthiness
beyond any doubt. That is why there is no sphere
of human kind that can not be filled without plastic.
While we can enumerate endless advantages of
plastics, the following examples clearly illustrate
the benefits of plastics to the society. Some
of the applications that offer tremendous benefits
globally, are:
· Distribution of milk
all across the breadth of the large countries
at the lowest cost
· Prevention of wastage due to degradation
of food products/vegetables/fruits by use of plastic
packaging
· Several medical applications including
Angioplasty of heart, catheters, implants etc.
· Fuel saving by weight reduction of automobile
with increasing use of light weight plastic parts
· Increased agricultural productivity due
to the use of plastics in the modern cultivation
techniques (drip irrigation, green house etc)
· Saving of water by use of plastic in
canal lining as well as pipes in carrying water
to distant places
· Distribution of electric power with the
help of plastic insulated cables
· Ease of communication by use of plastic
in telephones, cell phones, etc.
· Saving of scarce resources like wood,
leather by use of plastics instead of these material
in building as well as footwear
· Prevention of deforestation by saving
paper and using plastic instead.
What is very important is that
the Government should try to find practical solution
to the basic problem on lack of discipline of
our Indian society where in every Indian has in
born culture of keeping oneself clean and litter
the environment. While we agree that the Indian
society would take another 50 years to improve
the discipline but banning is not the answer.
Instead we recommend following steps to curb the
problems of choking of drains because of littered
plastic products:
1. Allow use of 20 micron thick plastic bags(
minimum thickness)
2. For prevention on
manufacture of thinner bags the manufacturers
of these bags should be asked to print their names/addresses.
This will allow not let the manufacturers of thinner
films/bags escape easily.
3. The municipality, with the help of
plastic industry develops more efficient disposal
and collection systems.
4. The municipality should set up many
disposal collection bins at public places and
develop an efficient system of
collecting the disposed plastic products from
these bins.
5. The municipality should set up an
incineration project to utilize the waste plastic
products as they have inherently very high energy.
6. The Government should develop a mass
campaign to educate the common mass.
7. The Government in collaboration with
the plastic industry should develop an education
module that can be taught to the students in all
public schools.
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