The global economy has long operated on a linear "take-make-dispose" model — extract raw materials, manufacture products, and discard them after use. This model generates enormous waste, depletes natural resources, and drives pollution. The circular economy offers a systemic alternative: keeping materials in use as long as possible, eliminating waste by design, and regenerating natural systems. For India, where waste management infrastructure is strained and resource imports are costly, the transition to a circular economy carries both environmental and economic significance.


1. Linear vs Circular Economy — The Core Distinction

FeatureLinear EconomyCircular Economy
ModelTake → Make → DisposeReduce → Reuse → Recycle → Recover
Resource flowOne-way (extraction to landfill)Closed-loop (materials cycle back)
WasteInevitable by-productSystem failure to be designed out
Value retentionLost at end of product lifeMaximised through repair, refurbishment, recycling
Natural capitalDepletedRegenerated
Economic logicGDP growth through consumptionDecoupling growth from resource use

The Ellen MacArthur Foundation, which pioneered circular economy thinking, frames it around three principles: (1) design out waste and pollution; (2) keep products and materials in use; (3) regenerate natural systems.


2. Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR)

EPR is the policy instrument at the heart of India's circular economy transition. It assigns responsibility to producers, importers, and brand owners (PIBOs) for the end-of-life management of their products.

EPR for Plastic Packaging

The Plastic Waste Management (Amendment) Rules, 2022, notified by MoEF&CC on 16 February 2022, introduced mandatory EPR for plastic packaging waste. Key provisions:

FeatureDetails
Notified16 February 2022
EPR Portal launched5 April 2022 (by CPCB)
Registered PIBOsOver 5,000 producers, importers, and brand owners
EPR target registered22.37 lakh TPA (tonnes per annum)
ImplementationPhased till FY 2027-28
Reuse targetsBegin from FY 2025-26
FocusRecycling, reuse, use of recycled content in packaging

The guidelines establish a centralised EPR portal managed by the Central Pollution Control Board (CPCB) where PIBOs register, declare EPR obligations, and demonstrate compliance through purchase of EPR certificates from registered recyclers and waste processors.

EPR for E-Waste

The E-Waste (Management) Rules, 2022, notified on 2 November 2022 and effective from 1 April 2023, replaced the 2016 Rules. Key features:

FeatureDetails
Scope130+ product categories including solar panels, medical devices, toys
EPR target (FY 2023-24 & 2024-25)60% of waste generated
EPR target (FY 2025-26 & 2026-27)70%
EPR target (FY 2027-28 onwards)80%
Solar PV modulesManufacturers store waste generated up to 2034-35 per CPCB guidelines
RefurbishersFormally recognised; must register with CPCB
Rare earth recoveryRecyclers must recover precious/semi-precious metals including REEs

3. Single-Use Plastics — Phase-Out

India banned 19 categories of single-use plastic items (with low utility and high littering potential) from 1 July 2022 under the Plastic Waste Management Amendment Rules, 2021. These include:

  • Plastic ear buds with plastic sticks, plastic sticks for balloons
  • Plastic flags, candy sticks, ice-cream sticks, polystyrene (thermocol) for decoration
  • Plastic plates, cups, glasses, cutlery (forks, spoons, knives, trays)
  • Plastic wrapping or packing films around sweet boxes, invitation cards
  • Plastic PVC banners less than 100 micron
  • Stirrers

India also raised the minimum thickness for carry bags from 50 microns to 75 microns (from September 2021) and 120 microns (from December 2022), discouraging thin, hard-to-recycle bags.


4. Product Stewardship and the "Waste to Wealth" Agenda

Product stewardship extends responsibility throughout the product life cycle — from design to disposal — shared across manufacturers, retailers, consumers, and government.

India's NITI Aayog has established a Circular Economy Cell and constituted 11 inter-ministerial committees for 11 focus sectors (e-waste, steel, aluminium, construction & demolition waste, municipal solid waste, vehicles, lithium-ion batteries, tyres, plastics, textiles, and used oil).

NITI Aayog released strategy papers on resource efficiency in steel, aluminium, construction and demolition waste, and e-waste in partnership with the EU Delegation to India. The reports on end-of-life vehicles, waste tyres, e-waste, and lithium-ion batteries (2024) provide actionable recommendations for EPR framework strengthening.

The CII Waste to Worth initiative (9th edition, November 2024) brings together industry, policymakers, and researchers to develop global technology partnerships for circular waste economies.


5. India's Circular Economy Initiatives — Key Policies

Policy / SchemeMinistryKey Focus
Plastic Waste Management Rules 2022MoEF&CCEPR for plastic packaging; SUP ban; recycled content mandates
E-Waste (Management) Rules 2022MoEF&CCEPR for electronics; 60–80% recycling targets; solar PV covered
Battery Waste Management Rules 2022MoEF&CCEPR for batteries (portable, automotive, industrial, EV)
Construction & Demolition Waste Rules 2024MoEF&CCMandatory use of recycled C&D material in government projects
NITI Aayog Circular Economy CellNITI Aayog11-sector action plans; resource efficiency strategy
Swachh Bharat Mission — Urban 2.0MoHUASegregation at source, material recovery facilities (MRFs), bulk waste generators
GOBARdhan SchemeMinistry of Jal ShaktiBiogas / compressed biogas from organic waste; circular use of bio-slurry as fertiliser

6. Challenges to Circular Economy Transition in India

  • Informal sector dominance: ~90% of India's recycling is handled by the informal waste-picker sector, which is often excluded from formal EPR systems. Integration is a key challenge — CPCB's EPR framework for plastics specifically allows inclusion of informal recyclers via aggregators.
  • Design-for-disassembly gap: Most products in India are not designed for easy repair or recycling; extended producer responsibility kicks in only at end-of-life, not at product design stage.
  • Data gaps: Accurate waste generation data is scarce; informal recycling is untracked.
  • Consumer behaviour: Lack of segregation at source undermines material recovery.
  • Infrastructure: Insufficient material recovery facilities (MRFs), formal dismantlers, and recyclers.

Recent Developments (2024–2026)

Global Plastics Treaty Negotiations — INC-5 Failure at Busan 2024

The Intergovernmental Negotiating Committee's fifth session (INC-5) to negotiate a legally binding Global Plastics Treaty met in Busan, South Korea in November 2024 but failed to reach consensus. The core division is between countries favouring caps on plastic production (EU, SIDS, Pacific Islands) versus those (including India, China, oil-producing states) advocating for a focus on waste management and recycling rather than production restrictions.

India's official position maintains that the treaty should focus on the end-of-life management of plastics rather than production bans, arguing that the plastics industry supports significant employment and economic activity in developing countries. Negotiations are expected to resume in 2025. The stalling of the treaty highlights how circular economy principles (reducing virgin material production) face resistance from supply-chain incumbents.

UPSC angle: Global Plastics Treaty status, India's negotiating position, INC process, and the production vs. waste management debate are Mains GS-2/GS-3 topics.


Extended Producer Responsibility — E-Waste and Battery Updates 2024

The E-Waste (Management) Rules 2022 and Battery Waste Management Rules 2022 have significantly expanded EPR scope in India. Under Battery Waste Rules, all producers of batteries (vehicle, portable, industrial) must register with CPCB, set up collection points, and achieve prescribed recycling targets (65% by 2023–24, rising to 80% by 2025–26). A formal battery recycling ecosystem is emerging, with companies like Attero Recycling, Tata Chemicals, and Lohum Cleantech establishing formal facilities.

The e-waste EPR system has been extended to cover EV batteries — a critical circular economy challenge as India's EV fleet expands (approximately 2 million EVs sold in 2024). Lithium-ion battery recycling (recovering lithium, cobalt, nickel, manganese) is now a strategic circular economy priority given India's import dependence for these critical minerals.

UPSC angle: Battery Waste Management Rules 2022, EV battery circular economy, critical mineral recovery (Li, Co, Ni), and formal recycling infrastructure are Mains GS-3 topics.


Urban Mining and Waste-to-Wealth Initiatives 2024

The Urban Mining Mission under MoHUA (Ministry of Housing and Urban Affairs) promotes recovery of valuable materials from urban waste streams including construction and demolition (C&D) waste, e-waste, textile waste, and legacy dump sites. India generates approximately 1 million tonnes of C&D waste daily — but only 20–25% is formally processed. A 2024 NITI Aayog report estimated the urban mining opportunity at ₹70,000 crore/year in recoverable material value.

The Government's Waste-to-Wealth Mission (under the 9 National Missions under PM-STI), led by the Office of the Principal Scientific Adviser, identified 25 technology solutions for waste management in 2024, including biomethanation (organic waste to biogas), pyrolysis (plastic/rubber to fuel oil), hydrometallurgy (e-waste), and algae-based wastewater treatment.

UPSC angle: Urban Mining Mission, C&D waste data, Waste-to-Wealth Mission technologies, and the circular economy opportunity in India are Mains GS-3 content.


Exam Strategy

For Prelims:

  • Plastic Waste Management (Amendment) Rules 2022 notified on 16 February 2022; SUP ban from 1 July 2022
  • EPR Portal for plastic packaging launched on 5 April 2022 by CPCB
  • E-Waste Rules 2022 notified 2 November 2022, effective 1 April 2023; replaced 2016 Rules
  • E-waste EPR targets: 60% (2023-25) → 70% (2025-27) → 80% (2027-28 onwards)
  • NITI Aayog constituted 11 inter-ministerial committees for circular economy sectors
  • Three principles of circular economy (Ellen MacArthur Foundation): design out waste; keep materials in use; regenerate natural systems

For Mains (GS Paper 3):

  • Structure circular economy answers around: policy instruments (EPR) + sector initiatives (plastics, e-waste, batteries) + challenges (informal sector, design gap, data) + way forward
  • EPR for informal waste pickers: note that India's plastic EPR guidelines specifically address inclusion of the informal sector through aggregators — a pro-poor circular economy measure
  • Link GOBARdhan to circular economy of organic waste; link Battery Waste Rules to EV policy
  • "India's circular economy remains producer-compliance focused rather than design-stage upstream intervention" — a nuanced critique for Mains