India’s top pollution watchdog has identified more than 240 electronic goods manufacturers and dealers in and around Delhi who must take back used products and, if you are lucky, have them picked up from your doorstep and also pay you for it.
This marks the formal rollout of the national recycling policy for discarded electronic and electrical goods under the Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) plan. The policy forms the core of the country’s e-waste management rules issued last year.
To begin with, the Central Pollution Control Board (CPCB) has identified 243 manufacturers and dealers in the National Capital Region to take back used gadgets. “While 143 (of these) have already applied for EPR authorisation, around 85 have been granted the certificate,” A Sudhakar, member secretary of the CPCB, told Hindustan Times.
Letters have been sent to the remaining companies and dealers asking them to get their EPR authorisation or face penalty, Sudhakar said. India is one of the biggest producers of ‘e-waste’ globally, producing about 1.7 million tonnes annually. The NCR produces about 100,000-lakh tonnes of e-waste annually, industry estimates say.
Most of this ends up with scrap dealers who dismantle even hazardous products without care, leading to toxic materials mixing with soil and air.
Experts say this leads to dangerous levels of environmental pollution that pose serious health hazard to humans and animals.