Hyderabad:The entire nation is celebrating the 150th anniversary of Gandhi, who is the epitome of non-violence. On this occasion, home minister Amit Shah gave a laudable call while speaking at Sankalp Yatra. He said that we must take the integrity and determination of Gandhi as an example and work towards banning one-time plastics.
South Central Railway has banned the usage of 50-micron plastic bags from October 2nd following Narendra Modi’s appeal to the nation. Lok Sabha, Secretariat, Air India and government of Odisha followed the lead.
In fact, Sikkim, Nagaland, Delhi, Maharashtra and Karnataka declared one-time plastic usage as a punishable offence. It is due to the lack of awareness among people given the fact that the implementation of the plastic ban is lacklustre in many areas despite measures by the government.
The reason why Sikkim is free of plastic from two decades is its citizens’ active role in conserving the environment.
Only when people become aware of the plastic menace, the nation can be successful in implementing a 100 per cent ban.
In the past 7 decades, 830 crore tonnes of plastic were produced out of which 60 per cent are still lingering in various forms on land and in water. In India, 95 lakh tonnes of plastic are being produced every year out of which 40 per cent is left uncollected. According to surveys, 43 per cent of plastic used for packaging is disposable.
Various studies have warned that plastic fibres in air and water can cause mutations in human DNA. Plastic waste is the main reason for natural calamities, malfunctioning of sanitary systems and extinction of various species like sea turtles.