, Ganges and its tributaries have become highways for plastic waste travelling into the oceans, TheCircularEconomy.com

Ganges and its tributaries have become highways for plastic waste travelling into the oceans

, Ganges and its tributaries have become highways for plastic waste travelling into the oceans, TheCircularEconomy.comIn an effort to identify plastic accumulation and leakage hotspots along the Ganges river, a recent project in three north Indian cities found that roughly 10%-25% of all the plastic waste generated was littered and was not routed into recycling or appropriate waste disposal channels.  This litter, which is either generated in or accumulates in the different cities’ hotspots is a major source of plastic leaking into the riverine system in the area, especially during the rainy season. Much of the litter was multilayer plastic packaging, disposable bottles and cutlery, nylon sacks, and polythene bags.

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, Ganges and its tributaries have become highways for plastic waste travelling into the oceans, TheCircularEconomy.com

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