BEAT THE PLASTICby Ananya Singh | 09-11-2018 21:38 |
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![]() In 2014, India made a resolution to achieve a clean country under the Swachh Bharat Abhiyan or the Clean India Mission. Many people participated in the programme and we do have cleaner platforms and streets, if not everywhere then, at least in some places. But the question is, does it really help to just clean your surroundings? The answer is it may not be so. The production of plastic has outpaced almost every other material in the last decade. Added to this woe, is the fact that since the 1950s, when plastic production started to take off, more than 9 billion tons of plastic have been generated, distributed and discarded. Of that waste, only 9% has been recycled, 12% incinerated and 79% of what is essentially indestructible man-made material is either in landfill or polluting the environment. According to a news report, "every year, we throw away enough plastic to circle the Earth four times. Much of that waste doesn't make it into a landfill, but instead ends up in our oceans, where it's responsible for killing one million seabirds and 100,000 marine mammals every year." Plastic pollution has, thus, become an epidemic. But what makes plastic so bad ? Most plastics are not biodegradable; they break down into smaller fragments known as microplastics. These microplastics contaminate the ocean, soil and the air, endangering both human and non-human species on earth. Although plastic is undeniably useful, durable and affordable, the impact of this pervasive, non-biodegradable material on the environment will last for centuries. Hence, keeping the serious implications of the growing usage of plastic, the government has many a times come forth to stimulate the ¡°cutting of the extensive usage of plastic¡±. In my home-state, Odisha (in India), the government has declared to entirely ban plastic all over the state, taking forward the motto - ¡°If you cannot reuse it, refuse it.¡±
The government also tried imposing a penalty on the use of plastic bags but carry bags are not the only plastic we use. Each month, we use lots of plastic in the form of water bottles or soft drink bottles. Almost every product we buy comes wrapped in plastic be it food or toiletries. Even supermarkets tend to wrap vegetables in plastic. Things we buy online always come wrapped in plastic, be it a simple t-shirt or an electronic item. And home delivery, a rising trend now, has further escalated the use of plastic. Therefore, the efforts of the government alone cannot reduce the use of plastic but we, the common citizens, need to step up and take the challenge. A random penalty for the use of plastic bag is not going to stop its use but our conviction can. So, here are the prescribed measures :
We cannot be a silent audience to witness the gradual but eventual transformation of our world into a ¡®plastic planet¡¯. What is needed is collective public effort to stop plastic pollution and safeguard our ecosystem/biodiversity. |