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Single-use food, beverage packaging forms 84% of Himalayan plastic waste’

Context : Core Finding

  • 84% of plastic waste in the Himalayan region comes from single-use food and beverage packaging.
  • 70% of this plastic is nonrecyclable, highlighting the severity of pollution in an eco-sensitive zone.

Relevance : GS 3(Environment and Ecology)

Geographical Coverage

  • Plastic waste audit spans the Himalayan belt from Ladakh to Arunachal Pradesh.
  • Major data insights from SikkimDarjeeling (West Bengal), and other nine Himalayan states.
  • Sikkim recorded the highest waste generation, followed by Darjeeling with over 36,000 items audited across 37 sites.

Organisational Framework

  • Led by:
    • Zero Waste Himalaya (Gangtok, Sikkim)
    • Integrated Mountain Initiative (Dehradun, Uttarakhand)
  • Together they organise The Himalayan Cleanup (THC), an annual plastic audit since 2018.

Systemic Nature of the Crisis

  • The issue is not just consumer behavior, but a production and systems-level problem.
  • Emphasis on:
    • Shifting away from extractive, centralised waste systems
    • Need for systemic policy interventions, not just individual change

Policy and Structural Implications

  • Calls for:
    • Paradigm shift in waste management policies
    • Reduction in production of non-recyclable plastics
    • Promotion of extended producer responsibility (EPR) and eco-friendly packaging
  • Urges decentralised and regenerative waste management models tailored to the Himalayan ecosystem.

Environmental Impact

  • The Himalayas’ fragile ecology is under serious threat from plastic accumulation.
  • Persistence of non-recyclable packaging adds long-term burden to already vulnerable environments.

May 2025
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