Amul: Amul urges Modi to delay plastic straw ban, cites impact on dairy farmers – Times of India

New Delhi: India’s largest dairy conglomerate amuli The U.S. has written to the government urging it to delay a planned ban on small plastic straws, saying the move would have a “negative impact” on farmers and milk consumption in the world’s largest commodity producer.
Amul made its appeal on May 28 in a letter reviewed by Reuters, which was sent to the prime minister. Narendra ModiOffice before July 1 on straws packed with small packs of juice and dairy products, an estimated $790 million market by an industry body. Amul sells billions of small dairy cartons each year with plastic straws.
The decision has rattled global beverage majors including Amul and PepsiCo Inc and Coca-Cola, especially after the government refused to change its stance and asked the companies to switch to alternative straws, Reuters previously reported.
In its letter, signed by managing director RS Sodhi, the $8 billion Amul Group said straws help boost milk consumption, and called for a ban – to put a stop to polluting, single-use plastics Part of Modi’s campaign – be postponed for a year. ,
Sodhi wrote, the delay will bring “huge relief and benefit” to 10 crore dairy farmers who “protect our food security in terms of milk and milk products”.
Modi’s office did not respond to Reuters requests for comment.
A source familiar with the government’s thinking previously told Reuters that the straw was a “low utility product” that should be replaced with paper straws or packs with a redesigned spout.
Sodhi declined to comment on his letter, but said Amul may have to sell packs without straws once the ban comes into effect from July 1.
Priced between Rs 5 and Rs 30 (7-40 US cents), small beverage packs containing juice and milk products are extremely popular in India and share a large market for such beverages.
Located in Gujarat, Modi’s home state in western India, Amul is also popular for its plastic pouches containing milk, cheese and chocolate.
Pepsi tropicana Juices, as well as Coca-Cola’s Mazza and Parle Agro’s Fruity Mango drink, are also among the top-selling beverages. Industry estimates show that 6 billion such packs are sold in India every year.
Praveen Aggarwal of Action Alliance for Recycling Beverage Carton, which represents beverage majors, said companies are looking at importing paper straws from China, Indonesia and other countries in light of the upcoming ban.
“There will be disturbances,” he said.
A person with direct knowledge of the matter said that Parle has also written a letter to the Indian government, stating that there was not enough local production of alternative straws, and that imported paper and biodegradable variants were about 250 percent more expensive.
Chief Executive Officer of Parle Agro Shauna Chauhan Said that the company has started importing paper straws for now, but it is not sustainable. “The economics just don’t match for a product of Rs 10,” she said.
Pepsi and Coca-Cola declined to comment.