Pick up your waste

Responsibility moves up-chain as BBMP ropes in manufacturers of difficult-to-recycle products

December 04, 2014 12:55 am | Updated April 07, 2016 02:33 am IST - Bengaluru:

BANGALORE, KARNATAKA, 12/10/2014: Used tyres and alloy wheels available at the shops on JC Road in Bangalore on October 12, 2014.
Photo: G.P. Sampath Kumar

BANGALORE, KARNATAKA, 12/10/2014: Used tyres and alloy wheels available at the shops on JC Road in Bangalore on October 12, 2014. Photo: G.P. Sampath Kumar

Bruhat Bangalore Mahanagara Palike (BBMP) has taken a step towards Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) by trying to rope in the major manufacturers of difficult-to-recycle products.

Under EPR, the producers are responsible for the processing of post consumer use waste generated by their products.

Though this is a standard practice in most developed countries, India is yet to enact a law making EPR mandatory. The lack of a law in this regard has stopped BBMP from making EPR mandatory in the city, point out waste management experts.

BBMP’s Special Commissioner for Solid Waste Management Darpan Jain said that the civic body is in talks with large-scale manufacturers of such waste to put up processing units in the city. He said manufacturers of rubber tyres, plastic packaging material, sanitary napkins, aerosol bottles and other materials that pose a challenge to recycling would be roped in to take responsibility for their products.

Mr. Jain said that BBMP already had held talks with some leading firms manufacturing sanitary napkins and that the response is positive.

Urban expert V Ravichander, associated with Social Venture Partners, Bengaluru who have come up with a study “Extracting Value from Bengaluru's Dry Waste Chain” and suggested the EPR initiative, said that an EPR regime is the future as the responsibility for waste management moved up-chain through the initiative.

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