Monday, 18 June 2018

Maharashtra govt’s move to ban use of plastic puts RIL in recycle mode

Company creating platform for building corpus and setting up full-fledged sustainability team
 Reliance Industries
The Maharashtra government’s decision in March to partially ban the use of plastic has put the country’s largest polymer producer in recycle mode. The Mukesh Ambani-led Reliance Industries (RIL) is now creating a platform for recycling, building a corpus and setting up a full-fledged sustainability team.
“The ban from Maharashtra was more of a wake-up call for the industry,” said Vipul Shah, chief operating officer of RIL’s petrochemicals business. RIL had homework in place over the last couple of years. The ban accelerated the process, he added.
“There was earlier a small team of two to three people working on a smaller project like bottle recycling. We now have a full-fledged department for sustainability of seven to eight people working full time and another 10-12 moonlighting,” Shah added.
RIL is the country’s largest producer of polymer, the main raw material required for making plastic items. Shah did not share details on how much of the company’s polymer production is consumed through plastic bags and other items banned in the state.
“The exposure to banned items is minimal, less than three per cent maybe. It is more likely to affect small enterprises. As for RIL, there are other segments to cater to,” said a person with direct knowledge of the business.
Part of the sustainability team’s job is to develop an extended producer responsibility (EPR) platform for the industry. “Being the largest polymer producer, we want to design something that is adaptable to India and not a copy from Europe. We want to design the whole chain from segregation, collection, secondary segregation, recycling, generating energy and oil,” Shah added.
The corpus, he said, would be funded through RIL’s petrochemicals business, not as part of its corporate social responsibility programme.
It makes for a curious case as to why RIL, with presence from oil to telecom, is not planning to enter bio-degradable bag manufacturing. “We have not considered making bio-degradable bags but continue to do research at the other end of it, in terms of whether we can make bio-degradable compounds for polymer,” Shah said. Himachal Pradesh was the first state to ban plastic bags in 2003. Delhi, Sikkim, Rajasthan and Goa are others that have followed suit.

Keep Reading : Plastic ban 

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