The report has been released by NITI Aayog in collaboration with The Energy and Resources Institute (TERI).
- Circular economy is a model of production and consumption, which involves sharing, leasing, reusing, repairing, refurbishing and recycling existing materials and products.
Challenges in Circularity of E-Waste
- Informal and inefficient collection: Approximately 78% of India's total E-waste is processed by the informal sector, achieving material recovery rates of only 10-20% compared to 95-97% in formal facilities.
- Weak monitoring & enforcement: Manipulation of Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) system. E.g. spurious EPR certificates.
- Limited EPR coverage: Only a few metals dominate, Iron (52%), Copper (18%) etc.; critical minerals (such as Lithium and Cobalt) remain neglected.
- Low technical capacity: Lack of skills and technologies for efficient, safe, and scalable recycling.
Recommendations:
- Strengthen Waste Management Rules: Monitoring of recyclers through an expanded of EPR coverage to include high-value metals.
- Provide Incentives: Additional incentives proposed for manufacturers of Advanced Chemistry Cells under the Production Linked Incentive (PLI).
- Integrate Battery recycling into the Indian Carbon Market, allowing recyclers to monetize Green House Gas (GHG) emission reductions.
- Informal Sector Integration: Use the single-window system; establish a separate vertical in National Critical Mineral Mission (NCMM) only on recycling.
- Other: Consumer awareness; skilling and re-skilling of workforce, etc.
Status of E-Waste in India
India’s Initiatives
Global Best Practices
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