India Eases Plastic Scrap
Import Ban
India
has partially lifted its total and immediate ban on the import of solid plastic
waste.
On 6 March the decision to ban imports was taken by the Indian
Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change, amending its Hazardous and
Other Wastes (Management & Trans-boundary Movement) Rules, 2016.
At
that stage, it was made clear that the restriction
applied to all importers, including those in Special Economic Zones (SEZs) and
Export Oriented Units (EOUs), raising questions about what would be the fate of
those containers on ships already heading for India.
But on
11 March it was reported that SEZs and EOUs would be exempted temporarily from
the ban, which will now apply to these special cases from 31 August this year,
according to our sources.
India’s
Central Pollution Control Board has calculated that 40% of India’s
domestically generated plastic waste remains uncollected, hence the drive to
stop imports.
An
SEZ is one of 13 regions in India that has more liberal economic rules than the
country’s domestic laws. The EOU scheme was introduced
in 1980 and includes those businesses whose entire production is for export.