India, which uses about 14 million tonnes of plastic annually, lacks an organized system for management of plastic waste, leading to widespread littering.
Company
News : Reliance Industries, India's largest petchem player,
is launching a project to use plastics in road construction, amid
growing concerns over pollution in the country of 1.3 billion whose
major cities are often plagued with smog and litter.
India,
which uses about 14 million tonnes of plastic annually, lacks an
organized system for management of plastic waste, leading to
widespread littering.
Prime
Minister Narendra Modi is urging India to end consumption of
single-use plastics by 2022.
But
Indians should focus on fighting pollution, not plastics, executives
at Reliance
Industries , whose chairman is Asia's richest man Mukesh Ambani,
said during a launch event on Tuesday.
The
company will seek to work with India's highway authority and
individual states to potentially supply a plastics-infused mix to
make some of the thousands of kilometers of roads Modi wants to build
to upgrade India's creaking infrastructure.
Light
plastics, the type used as carry bags or snack wrappers, are
typically not viable to recycle and so end up in landfills, street
corners or oceans. Reliance wants to shred these plastics and mix
them with bitumen, a formula the conglomerate says is cheaper and
longer-lasting.
"(This)
can be a game-changing project both for our environment and our
roads," Vipul Shah, the COO of the petrochemicals business, said
at a company petchem plant in the western state of Maharashtra.
Shah
was coy on details, saying Reliance had yet to work out the financial
fine print in what he stressed would be a philanthropic endeavour.
Reliance's
announcement comes as campaigners such as Greta Thunberg ramp up
pressure on businesses to help tackle climate change.
"It
is happening internationally and now has started percolating to India
too, though it's at a very early stage," said Sunil Dahiya, an
analyst at the Center for Research on Energy and Clean Air.
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