Screen Print India Magazine

Screen Print India Magazine

A Premier Magazine on Screen Printing, Textile Printing, Digital Printing
advertise@adityaexpo.com
HomeAssociationsIndia Plastics Pact is formally launched – A joint initiative between CII and WWF India

India Plastics Pact is formally launched – A joint initiative between CII and WWF India

08 September 2021: H E Alexander Ellis, British High Commissioner to India, was present at the launch of the India Plastics Pact, the first in Asia, at CII’s 16th Sustainability Summit. The India Plastics Pact, a joint initiative between the Confederation of Indian Industry (CII) and World Wide Fund for Nature-India (WWF India), will bring together leading businesses at a national level to make commitments for building a circular system for plastics. The Pact envisions a world where plastic is valued and does not pollute the environment.

It is supported by UK Research & Innovation (UKRI) and WRAP, a global NGO based in the UK. WRAP provides operational and technical support to Plastics Pacts in Europe, the Americas, Australia and Africa and fully supports the Pact in India.

Jamshyd N Godrej, Past President, CII, said, “Innovation, collaboration and voluntary commitments contextualised for India and led by Indian companies will help the transition to a circular economy for plastics. The Plastics Pact model offers this solution. While this pact is already active in a number of other countries, I commend CII and WWF India for bringing this initiative to India”.

“I am certain that the Founding Members and Supporter businesses and organizations present here will lead the way towards better use of plastics and create the large impact, which will benefit all sections of society and industry in our country”, said Chandrajit Banerjee, Director General, CII.

Arvind Wable, President, WWF India, said, “The India Plastics Pact provides a strong platform for Indian businesses to drive actionable, sustainable solutions and accelerate the transition toward a circular economy.”

India generates 9.46 MT of plastic waste annually, of which 40% is not collected; about half of all plastics produced in the country are used in packaging, most of it is single-use in nature. Commitments made under the Pact aim to keep plastic packaging in the economy and out of the natural environment. Today 17 businesses including major FMCG brands, manufacturers, retailers, and recyclers have committed to the Pact as founding members, and ten have joined as supporting organisations. At the core of all Plastics Pacts lie four ambitious, time-bound targets for reducing, innovating and re-imagining plastic packaging.

The India Plastics Pact aims to empower businesses, governments and the entire plastics value chain to transition towards a circular economy for plastics in India. The Pact will stimulate innovative new business models to reduce the total amount of plastic packaging. It will also help build a stronger recycling system, ensuring that plastic packaging can be effectively recycled and made into new products, and back to packaging with the support of all stakeholders.

Activities immediately after the launch will focus on collectively identifying projects that can deliver the most significant impact in the long and short term. This could include identification of barriers to incorporation of recycled content in packaging, design of reusable packaging and removal/elimination of unnecessary plastics packaging.

H.E Mr Alexander Ellis, the British High Commissioner to India, in this context, said that “Protecting the climate and environment is a key pillar of the 2030 Roadmap agreed by PMs Johnson and Modi, which sets out the UK and India’s shared ambition over the next decade. The UK is proud to be India’s biggest European research partner, with £400 million of joint investment in research and innovation since 2008. Through joint efforts by CII, WWF India, the Waste and Resources Action Programme (WRAP), UK Research and Innovation, and members of the India Plastics Pact, this first of its kind initiative in Asia will complement India’s other bold initiatives in the renewables sector and efforts to limit single-use plastics.”

Share With:
X
X