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District-level panels to monitor use of plastic water bottles in Karnataka

District-level panels to monitor use of plastic water bottles in Karnataka

Time of India18-06-2025

Bengaluru: In order to tackle growing plastic pollution across the state, the govt Tuesday ordered the formation of high-level committees in every district to monitor the handling and disposal of discarded single-use plastic water bottles.
The announcement, which coincided with the govt's World Environment Day celebration, came from chief minister Siddaramaiah.
The district-level committees to be headed by deputy commissioners will include CEOs of zilla panchayats, superintendents of police and deputy directors of food and civil supplies department. They will be tasked with tracking the sale of plastic bottles, ensuring their scientific disposal and raising public awareness.
They will meet once in every three months to review progress and share enforcement data with Karnataka State Pollution Control Board (KSPCB).
Marking the day's theme — Beat plastic pollution — Siddaramaiah said: "It is a difficult job, but we must do it. Bengaluru alone generates 900 tonnes of garbage every day. If we are keen to safeguard the environment, we must discontinue usage of plastic and find suitable alternatives."
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Environment minister Eshwar Khandre said the move to regulate plastic water bottles is necessary. "We must first focus on scientific disposal of discarded plastic water bottles."
The initiative is the latest in a series of measures aimed at improving management of plastic waste in the state. A month ago, Khandre directed the additional chief secretary of his department to ensure mandatory enforcement of extended producer responsibility (EPR) on manufacturers of plastic water bottles across districts.
Under EPR mandate, manufacturers are expected to take responsibility for end-of-life collection and processing of their products. Khandre urged bottle manufacturers to adopt a buy-back model — purchasing used bottles from consumers while selling new ones.
In a further incentive to encourage plastic bottle returns, KSPCB chairperson PM Narendraswamy announced that shredding machines would be installed within urban local body limits, offering users a refund of Re 1 for each discarded bottle returned.
Meanwhile, a random survey conducted recently by Food Safety and Standards Authority of India (FSSAI) in Bengaluru found that several brands of bottled water being sold in local markets were of substandard quality. This has raised additional concerns about the need for stricter monitoring of bottled water production and distribution in the state.

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Biz stunted due to illegal HT seeds; Nagpur, Wardha dealers call for strike today
Biz stunted due to illegal HT seeds; Nagpur, Wardha dealers call for strike today

Time of India

time25 minutes ago

  • Time of India

Biz stunted due to illegal HT seeds; Nagpur, Wardha dealers call for strike today

Nagpur: Seed dealers in Nagpur and Wardha — both predominantly cotton-growing belts — have called for a strike on Monday alleging that illegal herbicide-tolerant (HT) seeds have eaten away half of their business. HT seeds are genetically engineered to be resistant to glyphosate, a cheap weed killer whose commercial sale awaits a green signal from the Ministry of Environment, Forest, and Climate Change (MoEFCC). The seed buying season is over, and the dealers are left with nearly 50% to 40% of unsold stock. They will now have to run after the seed companies to refund the booking amount. The companies may refund the amount if they relent or adjust it for the coming season, said the traders TOI spoke to. A packet of the authorised BG II seed, which is only effective against the bollworm pest, has MRP of Rs901 a packet. In contrast, farmers paid nearly Rs2,000 for a packet of HT seeds, said the dealers. As per the traders, the HT seeds are illegally grown in the hinterlands of Gujarat and smuggled to Vidarbha. Vijay Chandak, president of Nagpur Agro Dealers Association, said the illegal seeds have completely overshadowed the market. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like Bring home all new SP160 & get an instant cashback up to ₹5000# Honda Learn More Undo "HT seeds have been the first choice of farmers this time. A massive proliferation of the seeds grown in clandestine farms can also lead to a crisis for the region's farmers. Sold in the grey market, there is no guarantee of the seeds' performance. There are chances that the weed killer may even destroy the cotton seed, and farmers would not be able to claim any compensation from the govt," said Chandak. Ravi Shende, his counterpart in Wardha, also spoke of a similar situation in the district. "The seeds come from Gujarat, where an entire illegal industry seems to operate. The govt must act against it," he said. Farm activist Vijay Jawandhia alleged that a number of operators are simply plucking off the seeds from the HT cotton and packing it to Vidarbha. "Even if grown illegally, the method is to develop a seed through hybridisation. The seeds taken out of the cotton crop can lack the required vigour. Yet, farmers are paying as much as Rs2,000 for a packet of such seeds," he said. Box Shortage of workers to clear weeds The high demand for HT seeds also indicates a labour shortage in the hinterland. It enables the free use of glyphosate-based weed killers on cotton plants, instead of deploying labour to manually clear the weeds. There is also a strong lobby for legalising HT seeds. In 2019, Shetkari Sangathana openly sowed the seeds, challenging the govt to take action. The seeds were developed by Mahyco-Monsanto, which withdrew from the trials, due to which it remains illegal to use. Glyphosate, however, is at present only allowed in non-cropped areas and tea gardens.

‘Govt's failure to move beyond MoUs has left industrial engine sputtering'
‘Govt's failure to move beyond MoUs has left industrial engine sputtering'

Time of India

time26 minutes ago

  • Time of India

‘Govt's failure to move beyond MoUs has left industrial engine sputtering'

Tamil Nadu has long been heralded as the industrial heartbeat of South India. From automobiles and electronics to textiles and petrochemicals, our state has stood as a symbol of innovation, enterprise, and economic resilience. Such a legacy demands vision, discipline, and above all, execution. As a man who steered Tamil Nadu's economic growth earlier, I am disturbed by this dangerous erosion in our industrial momentum under the current govt. Earlier this year, Chief Minister M K Stalin proclaimed that his govt facilitated industrial investments worth ₹6.64 lakh crore. A staggering figure at first glance. But scratch the surface, and the truth is far less flattering. As per the Department for Promotion of Industry and Internal Trade and the Reserve Bank of India (Q4 2023-2024), the actual realised investment is more than a quarter of that amount. The remainder exists only in the form of MoUs and announcements. In the past four years, several flagship projects that could have reshaped our economic geography remain in planning purgatory. You Can Also Check: Chennai AQI | Weather in Chennai | Bank Holidays in Chennai | Public Holidays in Chennai The Chennai-Kanyakumari Industrial Corridor (CKIC), for instance, was conceived as part of the East Coast Economic Corridor. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like These Are The Most Beautiful Women In The World Undo The ambitious 590 km stretch was meant to revitalise 23 districts through better port connectivity and industrial expansion. Despite a ₹3,500 crore loan from the Asian Development Bank, the project has seen sluggish progress. Tenders such as EPC-15 and EPC-07, floated in 2020 and 2021, witnessed delays in finalisation. As of today, less than 10% of the proposed road length has seen tangible work. This corridor could have brought prosperity to our southernmost districts, but sadly, it remains largely on paper. The Chennai-Bengaluru Industrial Corridor (CBIC) was envisioned to bridge Tamil Nadu's northern districts with India's tech capital, Bengaluru. A special purpose vehicle was created, and a master plan for the Ponneri node was drafted. Although master planning has concluded, core infrastructure remains incomplete and major investments are yet to be grounded. Billed as Tamil Nadu's answer to Gujarat's Dholera and Maharashtra's Aurangabad corridors, the Coimbatore-Salem-Chennai High-Tech Corridor was supposed to be our gateway to next-generation manufacturing. Today, industrial parks such as Sipcot Krishnagiri remain underutilised. With five strategic nodes — Chennai, Hosur, Coimbatore, Salem, and Tiruchirappalli — the Tamil Nadu Defence Industrial Corridor was launched to position the state as a defence manufacturing hub. MoUs worth ₹11,794 crore were signed, but only ₹3,861 crore (33%) has been actualised. The fallout of such inertia is not just economic, it is human. In terms of employment, based on standard projections, Tamil Nadu could have generated more than 400,000 direct jobs had these corridors progressed as intended. Tamil Nadu is increasingly losing out to more agile states that offer clearer approvals, proactive governance, and visible outcomes. Our state's Human Development Index tells its own story. While Chennai stands at 0.841, districts such as Nagapattinam lag at 0.699. Industrial corridors, if executed properly, would have reduced this disparity. Instead, the gap is widening. Tamil Nadu's Gross State Domestic Product for the financial year 2024-25 is ₹17.23 lakh crore, with manufacturing contributing approximately 35%. Yet the foundation of that industry, sectors like logistics, warehousing, and transport, are underperforming. The Coimbatore Multi-Modal Logistics Park has faced slippage in timelines. The warehousing policy promised in 2023 is still awaiting approval. In its tenure, the AIADMK hosted two successful Global Investors Meets in 2015 and 2019, collectively drawing more than ₹3 lakh crore in investment. The govt facilitated land acquisition, sped up clearances, and ensured that MoUs translated into operational businesses. It is not too late to change course. But it requires political will and administrative discipline. The AIADMK proposes a three-pronged approach to industrial renewal. The first is time-bound corridor execution. Every corridor must be governed by a Chief Minister-chaired task force with quarterly targets. For CKIC, tenders must be finalised and project design groundwork started post mid-2026, with a deliverable milestone of 100 km of road by mid-2027. For the CBIC, fast-track plans to operationalise the Ponneri node, aiming for readiness by the first quarter of 2027. Tamil Nadu must also move beyond the Chennai-centric model. By 2027, the AIADMK proposes to develop 25 district-level MSME clusters with pre-zoned, plug-and-play infrastructure. Focus areas include technology and electronics in Madurai and Sivaganga; defence manufacturing in Salem and Hosur; and agro-processing and food tech in the Cauvery Delta and southern districts. To improve transparency, a digitised, single-window clearance system with real-time tracking is proposed along with a dynamic land bank registry to help industries locate viable plots and a RERA-style industrial oversight authority to audit project progress and ensure accountability. Industrial development is not a vanity project. It is an unending commitment to economic equity, youth employment, and regional prosperity. The DMK govt's failure to move beyond MoUs has left our industrial engine sputtering. Our entrepreneurs wait. Our youth emigrate. Our investors look elsewhere. The AIADMK is committed to changing this. We believe Tamil Nadu can — and must — lead India's next phase of industrial growth. It is time to move from paper corridors to real factories, from rhetoric to results. (The writer is Leader of the Opposition in the Tamil Nadu Legislative Assembly and a former Chief Minister of Tamil Nadu) Email your feedback to

Crooks impersonating Mumbai cops & ED officials force 75-yr-old in Kolhapur to transfer Rs7.9 crore
Crooks impersonating Mumbai cops & ED officials force 75-yr-old in Kolhapur to transfer Rs7.9 crore

Time of India

time40 minutes ago

  • Time of India

Crooks impersonating Mumbai cops & ED officials force 75-yr-old in Kolhapur to transfer Rs7.9 crore

Kolhapur: Cybercriminals posing as Mumbai police and Enforcement Directorate (ED) officials forced a 75-year-old Kolhapur resident to transfer Rs7.86 crore in phases, between May 26 and June 23, on the pretext of an "inquiry into a case of funding a banned terror outfit and money laundering". This was one of the biggest cyber frauds to have been reported from western Maharashtra. The victim, who had settled in Kolhapur after retiring in 2012 as an assistant vice-president from a refinery in Jamnagar, exhausted all his earnings from investment in shares and fixed deposit (FD) held jointly with his wife to make 14 money transfers to accounts with banks in Mumbai, Nashik, Akola, Chandigarh, Prayagraj, Manoharpur and in Andhra Pradesh and Bihar. The man's three sons are settled in the US. He had rejoined the refinery in 2017 for two years before finally starting a retired life, police said. According to the FIR, at one point, the victim even told one of the crooks, who identified himself as an ED official, that he had no connection whatsoever with the money laundering and that the call appeared to him as a cyber fraud. The caller then disconnected the call. Later, the victim received another call from a man, who identified himself as a serving senior officer from Mumbai police and asked him to cooperate with the ED official. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like Вот что поза во сне говорит о вашем характере! Удивительные Новости Undo After securing all his investment and bank balance details in the name of inquiry and verification, the crooks even used bogus "Supreme Court order, Reserve Bank of India (RBI) and Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI)" letters to convince the victim to sell off his shares and deposit the generated money and his joint FD money to the accounts shared by them. They promised the victim that the money would be returned to him, post-verification. The Juna Rajwada police in Kolhapur registered a case in this connection following a preliminary verification of the victim's complaint application. "We have deployed teams to four places across the country to collect information as part of our ongoing investigation and to verify the accounts where money was transferred. The victim had just Rs1.5 lakh in his bank accounts, and the rest in shares," inspector Sanjivkumar Zade of the Juna Rajwada police told TOI. According to the FIR, it all started around 10.30am on May 24 when the victim got a call on his cellphone while he was at his home in Kolhapur. The caller identified himself as a representative of "Data Protection Board of India" and told the victim that he was looking into a data leak case. The caller asked the victim to confirm the last four digits of his Aadhaar card number. Later, he told the victim that his Aadhaar credentials were misused to purchase a cellphone and cheat some 20 people in Mumbai with unauthorised advertisements and other purposes. The caller claimed that a criminal case was registered against the victim at the Colaba police station in Mumbai. The caller then sent a photo of an "information report" about the cheating case on the WhatsApp number of his wife as the victim's WhatsApp number was not operating. Along with this report, the caller sent another photo of a group of people purportedly belonging to a banned terror outfit and asked the victim if he knew any of them. The caller went on to tell the victim that the police had spotted a money transfer from his account to the terror outfit. When the victim said he had no connection whatsoever with this matter, the caller connected him to another man who claimed to be a senior inspector with the Colaba police. The victim stated in his complaint that the Colaba officer asked him to visit the police station to record his statement but when he replied that he is a senior citizen and was not in a position to travel to Colaba, the "officer" said he can video record his statement before an ED officer. The "officer" then connected the victim to the "ED officer" on video call. The latter then got the victim to make the money transfers in phases till the latter realised the con, the police said.

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