Single-use food, beverage packaging forms 84% of Himalayan plastic waste

Single-use food and beverage packaging forms more than 84% of the plastic waste in the eco-sensitive Himalayan region, an anti-waste collective of NGOs has found.


According to the Zero Waste Himalaya Alliance, about 70% of the plastics collected from across the Himalayan belt from Ladakh to Arunachal Pradesh are non-recyclable and have no market value.

The GAIA-Asia Pacific and Break Free supported the meeting From Plastic, two global networks “committed to ending plastic pollution by championing real solutions”.

A statement issued by the alliance on Thursday (May 8, 2025) said, “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 participants identified the critical need for producer responsibility enforcement in mountain regions, calling for a paradigm shift away from centralised and extractive waste systems toward solutions grounded in local realities and traditional wisdom.


 

Short Description
The Zero Waste Himalaya Alliance was formed to combat the crisis in the eco-sensitive region