WORLD ENVIRONMENT DAY 2025

India’s Concerns :   

  • Date: June 5
  • Organized by: United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP)
  • Host Country: Republic of Korea
  • Theme: “Beat Plastic Pollution”
  • Established: 1972 (Stockholm Conference); First celebrated in 1973 with the theme “Only One Earth”

India’s Global Commitments :

  • Basel Convention (2019): Advocated global consent before plastic waste export; opposed illegal dumping
  • G20 Osaka Blue Ocean Vision (2019): Target – no plastic waste in oceans by 2050
  • High Ambition Coalition for Nature & People (2021): Protect 30% of Earth’s land & seas by 2030

Key National Regulations :

Plastic Waste Management (Amendment) Rules, 2021

Ban on:

  • Identified single-use plastics (from July 2022)
  • Plastic bags <120 microns (from Dec 2022)
  • Non-woven bags <60 GSM (from Sep 2021)

Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR)

  • Enforced via centralized portal (2022)
  • Over 50,000 producers and 2,800 processors registered
  • 103 lakh tonnes of plastic waste processed (till Dec 2024)
  • EPR ensures manufacturers take responsibility for post-use disposal

Safe Food Packaging: The FSSAI’s Food Safety and Standards (Packaging) Regulations, 2018 set standards for safe food packaging materials, including plastics.

Technological & Economic Innovations

  • Plastic-to-fuel conversion via CSIR, APChemi, IICT Hyderabad
  • R&D Funding: ₹345 crore for 15 projects on bio-based alternatives
  • 18 Centres of Excellence (DCPC) developing sustainable packaging
  • Plastic Parks (10 approved): ₹40 crore per project, co-located processing zones for recycling, manufacturing

Swachh Bharat Mission & Local Innovations

  • SBM Grameen Phase II: PWMUs in clusters, ₹16 lakh/block
  • SBM Urban 2.0: 3-star city ranking, ₹1.4 lakh crore funding
  • Kamalpur (Tripura): PBAT compostable bags replace plastics
  • Trichy (Tamil Nadu): “Thunippai Thiruvizhai” campaign; 3 markets saved ~3,000 kg of plastic

Other Institutional Mechanisms

  • India Plastic Challenge & National Expo: Promote alternatives
  • CSIR-DDA Tech: Converts plastic to tiles, monomers, oil
  • FSSAI Food Packaging Rules (2018): Ensures safe & regulated use of plastics in food industries

Conclusion :

India is aligning policy, technology, and community participation to lead a shift toward a circular, plastic-free economy. With strong international cooperation and local action, India demonstrates a model for global environmental leadership.

GS3 – Environment & Ecology

Plastic Pollution: Link to sustainable development, marine ecosystem degradation, and climate goals, Waste Management: Plastic Waste Management Rules (2021), EPR norms, and circular economy initiatives, Science & Tech: Role of CSIR, pyrolysis tech, bio-based polymers like PBAT, Green Economy: Plastic Parks, innovation funding, renewable energy from waste, Policy & Governance: Basel Convention, G20 Blue Ocean Vision, India’s multilateral climate diplomacy

GS2 – Governance & International Relations

International Conventions: Basel, Stockholm, and Rotterdam Conventions, Global Cooperation: India’s role in UNEP-led campaigns, High Ambition Coalition, Policy Implementation: Centre–State coordination in enforcing plastic bans

GS1 – SocietyPublic Participation

: Swachh Bharat Mission, local innovations (Kamalpur & Trichy), community-led efforts, Behavioural Change: Mission LiFE and responsible consumption patterns

“India’s fight against plastic pollution is as much about policy and technology as it is about behavioural change.” Discuss.

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