
80% Of Plastic Waste In Himalayas From Single-Use Food Packaging: Report
Single-use food and beverage packaging makes up more than 80 percent of all plastic waste generated in the Himalayas, according to a new report. The findings by the Zero Waste Himalaya Alliance shed light on an escalating plastic pollution crisis that is threatening both the environment and the livelihoods of communities living in the hills.
Roughly 70 percent of the plastics gathered from the Himalayan region, which stretches from Ladakh to Arunachal Pradesh, have no market value and cannot be recycled. The environmental issue was brought to light at the Zero Waste Himalaya Network Meet in Bir, Himachal Pradesh, where members criticised the lack of effective policies for mountain ecosystems.
Out of the nine Himalayan states that were targeted in 2025, Sikkim produced the most garbage, with a total of 53,814 pieces of litter, making up 44 percent of the total waste. Darjeeling in West Bengal, which had 36,180 items audited in over 37 locations, was second in line.
11,958 pieces of garbage were collected and inspected by the Ladakh volunteers at 18 different locations. With 6,512 and 5,937 waste pieces, Nagaland and Uttarakhand came in fourth and fifth place, respectively.
Food and beverage packaging accounted for 84.2 percent of the total plastic trash, the report added. The waste pieces found in the region were audited to gather data on the top corporate polluters in the Himalayan belt.
'Over the past six years, the data has indicated that the Himalayan waste crisis is fundamentally a production and systems issue rather than a post-consumer waste management flaw. While the role of individual behavioural change was acknowledged and emphasised, the need for systemic, policy-level interventions and a paradigm shift away from centralised, extractive waste systems was seen as critical,' the alliance said in a statement.
According to the survey, the major polluting brands include those producing energy drinks and instant noodles. Their packaging formed a significant part of the waste.
The report shows that 71 percent of the plastic waste from food packaging is 'non-recyclable.' Audits from 2022 and 2023 revealed that over 72 percent and 77.4 percent of the plastic collected was also non-recyclable. Most of this waste includes multilayered plastic packets and Tetra Paks, which waste pickers and scrap dealers don't accept. As a result, this plastic often ends up littering the mountains, blocking rivers, or filling up landfills.
Experts say the problem goes beyond consumer behaviour. Data from the last six years shows that the real issue lies in how products are made and packaged, not just how people dispose of them. The report stresses the need for stronger policies and systemic change, while also recognising that individual action is important.

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Time of India
3 days ago
- Time of India
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Time of India
5 days ago
- Time of India
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Graphic Blind Faith, High Point: Scaling the Invisible box1 Chhonzin Angmo's Road to Summit >> April 6 | Departs Delhi >> April 10 | Begins Everest Base Camp trek from Lukla >> April 18 | Reaches base camp; starts 26-day acclimatisation >> May 15 | Reaches Camp 1 >> May 16-18 | Climbs through Camps 2 to 4 >> May 19, 8.30 am | Reaches the summit of Mount Everest box 2 The famous 5: Everest's Sightless Pioneers >> Erik Weihenmayer (US) | First blind person to summit Everest (2001); completed Seven Summits >> Andy Holzer (Austria) | Summited Everest in 2017 via Tibet >> Zhang Hong (China) | First blind Asian climber to summit (2021) >> Lonnie Bedwell (US) | Blind Navy veteran summited in 2023 >> Chhonzin Angmo (India) | First blind woman to summit Everest (2025) box3 No Legs, But What A Feat! Other Indian physically challenged mountaineers:- >> Arunima Sinha | Second amputee in the world to summit Everest (2013) >> Chitrasen Sahu | Double amputee (called Half Human Robo); climbed Mt Elbrus and Kilimanjaro >> Uday Kumar | Amputee climber; scaled Kilimanjaro and Mt Rhenock >> Tinkesh Kaushik | First triple amputee to reach Everest base camp box 4 "To climb Everest, you don't just need strength. You need a reason," Angmo said. She found hers in the dark. And she carried it all the way to the top of the world. MSID:: 121547482 413 |


NDTV
5 days ago
- NDTV
Video: Chopper Makes Emergency Landing On Road, Tail Crushes Car
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