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Team Conscious Carma

Team Conscious Carma

BeautySkin-Care

Bayla Skin arrives with the launch of superfoods-powered vegan and cruelty free products

by Team Conscious Carma June 13, 2023
written by Team Conscious Carma

Elevate your self-care routine with Bayla Skin, the latest addition to the beauty space. This new vegan skincare brand offers a basket of honest and thoughtful moments of love and care to revitalize your skin and foster a holistic and sensorial experience.

Their multi-faceted product range includes a diverse selection of face masks, a hydrating face serum, and a detoxifying face wash, along with their newest addition Avocado Sunscreen – all packed with superfoods and active ingredients such as raspberries, blueberries, peach, watermelon, AHAs, hyaluronic acid, niacinamide, alpha arbutin, ferulic acid, and salicylic acid.

Each of Bayla Skin’s formulations is carefully crafted to address different skin concerns and skin types, using the best of nature and science-backed ingredients. All of their products are 100% cruelty-free, vegan & PETA-certified, and free of 17 toxic ingredients that are often found in most beauty products.

 “Our vegan and cruelty-free formulations, powered by superfoods, are meticulously crafted to enhance your skin’s natural beauty and provide a delightful sensorial experience. We prioritize honest love and care, which is why our products are free of harmful ingredients and undergo rigorous dermatology screenings. Within just five months of operations, we have successfully served 50,000 satisfied customers, and within the next six months, we plan to expand to more prominent marketplaces”, says Founder, Sai Rakshith.

Availability : https://bayla.in/

June 13, 2023 0 comment
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ApparelSustainability

THEVASA – Clothes that make you feel at Home

by Team Conscious Carma June 12, 2023
written by Team Conscious Carma

Originating from the Sankrit word ‘vasa’, Thevasa literally translates to a home. A home that stems its roots from a land of kaleidoscopic history and an ever-rich cultural heritage. Founders Himanshu Wardhan and Neha Kalra introduced Thevasa in 2019 to create an experience that pushes India’s artisanal history to the forefront.

Inspiration

Co- Founder Himanshu Wardhan’s inspiration to contemporise Traditional Indian crafts thereby making them commercially viable, stemmed from his enriching experience of 5 years spent setting up Etsy India for the global market. He then decided to pay homage to his Indian roots by joining his wife and co-founder Neha Kalra full time with Thevasa.

“Thevasa began as an exploration of everything Indian; everything that reminds us of our Vasa (Sanskrit for home). We have traveled all over and realised how little we know of this land. At Thevasa, we’re coming back home with dreams from all over the  world.” says Himanshu Wardhan, Co-Founder, Thevasa

Having lived in California, Mumbai and Delhi, India remains a recurring source of inspiration for the husband-wife duo. They quickly realised the potential in the market space for contemporary, minimalistic designs that would serve the purpose of functionality and the feeling of living in clothing, that makes you feel “at home”. Thevasa launched to contemporize an intricate culture that spans a few hundred decades and re-look at traditional designs through a modern outlook.

Today, the brand works with artisans across India, seamlessly amalgamating and experimenting age-old design techniques with modern aesthetics and silhouettes. From sketching singular details to selecting the fabric, embroidery and cut, the design team at Thevasa is deeply involved with artisans in every step of the manufacturing process.

Moving towards being a 100% sustainable fashion brand

For us, being sustainable is not a marketing gimmick or a positioning strategy, but something that we believe in and try to be as sustainable as possible without talking much about it. We try to avoid plastics in our packing and try to recycle and reuse as much as possible, be it with our products or at our experience centre. We use 100% certified compostable bag made from plastic start with no microplastic for our online orders. At our retail stores we use paper bags or cloth totes. Our products are mostly made of natural materials. We upcycle the fabric waste and create small usable products such as bags, pouches and Kids garments etc

Affordable Conscious Luxury Fashion

We believe that it’s very important to offer conscious design at affordable pricing because if the product is not accessible then customers will continue to opt for other non-sustainable products. Our price points are very accessible for a designer brand that is innovating with new contemporary designs and making handcrafted products.

Vision & Mission

Our vision is to collaborate with artisans from all parts of India, and keep exploring and experimenting the diverse and rich cultural heritage of India. The biggest source of Inspiration of our designs is “Incredible India”.

The brand also intends to have a dense Pan India Retail presence in the near future.

Available : www.thevasa.in

June 12, 2023 0 comment
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AccessoriesSustainability

“WHY IS THE NEXT GENERATION CHOOSING GROWN DIAMONDS?  

by Team Conscious Carma June 9, 2023
written by Team Conscious Carma

Simple. Great for the Ego, and even better for the Eco.

A new generation of progressive and adaptable individuals is indulging in more conscious diamonds. A growing cohort and tribe that believe that, whether it is love or love for diamonds, it must be conflict-free. Contrary to popular belief, owning or gifting diamonds is about more than just money. However, emotional investment is required. Nothing else matters when emotions are involved, as we all know. 

The generation’s beauty is that they are interested in the diamond’s journey and the process of making it. They are sceptical of everything. Does the radiance and brilliance of traditionally mined diamonds obscure the truth about exploitation and conflict? And the youth have discovered grown diamonds in their pursuit of finding freedom from the unethical treatment of the earth, the people involved in the extraction, and the community. 

CONSCIOUSLY MAKING SUSTAINABLE CHOICES. 

The progressives want to be free of the shackles of misery that are associated with diamonds. The paradox is that diamond miners (in the traditional sense), who extract the most precious stone from the earth’s core, are among the community’s poorest members. 

The Land 

Diamond Alchemists, who are skilled and equipped to work in high-tech facilities, grow diamonds in a controlled environment. This effectively means that large tracts of land will not be dug up and excavated to deep recesses beneath the earth’s surface. Grown diamonds eliminate dangerous scenarios such as soil erosion, deforestation, and ecosystem destruction. Second, mined diamonds can devastate the natural beauty and local ecology of the area where the mines are located, whereas Grown Diamonds require no earth displacement and use a small amount of land to construct facilities.  

This is only the tip of the iceberg. The impact of choosing Grown Diamonds vs. Mined Diamonds is a welcome revelation, according to a Global, reputable research and consulting firm.   

The Air 

If love is in the air, so are carbon, sulphur dioxide, and nitrogen dioxide emissions. Here’s how 1 carat of diamond mining compares to 1 carat of grown diamond. Cabon Emissions: 57,000 grammes vs. 0.028 grammes. While mined diamonds emit 0.042 tonnes of nitrogen dioxide, grown diamonds emit 0.09 milligrams. 

The Water 

Diamonds are luxury. Mined diamonds require 0.48 m3 of water to produce one carat of diamond, while grown diamonds require 0.07 m3. To put that into perspective, the water usage ratio is 6.9:1.  

If you consider yourself to be a conscientious consumer, Grown Diamonds may be the right choice for you. Here’s another one. Incidents involving the environment. According to the international report, the mined category has 4.5 incidents. There have been zero environmental incidents reported in the grown Diamond Category. 

The Natural Habitat 

Grown diamonds and their purchasers can assert that their diamonds do not disrupt natural habitat. Plants and animals are not harmed in any way during the diamond-growing process. Grown diamonds have no negative impact on biodiversity, ecology, or natural habitat. The truth is that when land is mined for diamonds, native plant and animal life is disrupted and displaced. Grown Diamonds simply believes and delivers on the belief that when taking diamonds home, de-homing others, including plants, animals, and people, is not an option. 

While Grown Diamonds have provided a solution for years of conflicted diamonds, human rights, and forced labour, there is still much room to achieve the deepest shade of green. The industry will rapidly transition to renewable energy with zero reliance on fossil fuels, while also monitoring its carbon footprint and achieving carbon neutrality. 

If diamonds are the ultimate symbol of love, then Grown Diamonds are an excellent way to ensure that love is conflict-free, guilt-free, and toxicity-free for all humans, animals, and, most importantly, the environment.”

Lisa Mukhedkar, Founder & CEO 
AUKERA Jewellery 
www.aukerajewellery.com 

“Aukera was founded by Lisa Mukhedkar, a highly accomplished retail designer and seasoned entrepreneur with over 25 years of experience. Supported by an exceptional team of retail experts and merchandisers, Aukera strives to be the go-to brand for women, free from any limitations associated with mined diamonds.

Lisa’s entry into this industry was influenced by her observations of the international market, where even established players like De Beers and Tanishq have embraced lab-grown diamonds. Moreover, key developments in this sector were presented in Nirmala Sitharaman’s recent budget, further solidifying the decision to venture into this domain.”

June 9, 2023 0 comment
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EnvironmentIndustry

Largest Sustainable Packaging platform in India and South Asia

by Team Conscious Carma June 6, 2023
written by Team Conscious Carma

Constantia Flexibles and SB Packagings kick off joint venture

Constantia Flexibles, Premji Invest and SB Packagings, have finalized the joint venture to create one of the largest sustainable packaging platforms in India and South Asia, following the regulatory approval from Competition Commission of India. The joint venture (SB-Constantia Flexibles), between two flexible packaging industry leaders and Premji Invest as shareholders, will leverage each company’s unique strengths and resources to achieve greater success in the Indian market.

 “I have full confidence in the partnership’s ability to be an effective solution provider to its customers in India through innovation and excellence. We will drive growth and profitability for all stakeholders,” said Pim Vervaat, Global CEO, Constantia Flexibles.

“The joint venture positions us as a clear leader to drive the sustainable packaging agenda in India and beyond with a unique product offering,” noted Amit Banga, Managing Director, SB Packagings.

Strong synergy potential with a focus on sustainability

SB-Constantia Flexibles will operate in the food and hygiene markets, offering medium to high-barrier packaging solutions. It will have close to 2,700 employees across nine plants spread across the country.

The JV will pursue organic and inorganic growth opportunities in higher value-added market segments, continuing its strong growth trajectory in the hygiene, food and HPC segment even as it further develops the sustainable mono-material EcoLam product range. It will bring together the mono-material capabilities of both Constantia Flexibles India and SB Packagings and offer medium to high-barrier packaging solutions to food and hygiene markets.

About the joint venture partners:

Constantia Flexibles is the world’s third largest producer of flexible packaging. Based on the guiding principle of ‘People, Passion, Packaging’, 8,700 employees manufacture tailor-made packaging solutions at 37 sites in 17 countries. Many international companies and local market leaders from the consumer and pharma industries choose Constantia Flexibles’ more sustainable and innovative products. Sustainability is a top priority at Constantia Flexibles: the company was rated Level A by Climate Change Leadership (CDP) in 2021 and Gold by EcoVadis in 2022.

SB Packagings, founded in 1989 by Mr. O.P Banga & Mr. Amit Banga, is one of the leading flexible packaging companies based out of India. SBP group over the past 4 decades, has been at the forefront of manufacturing mono-polymer sustainable packaging much ahead of its peers. It has won various awards and global accolades for its innovation & printing excellence. In 2022, it was chosen as the ‘Packaging Company of the Year’ by PrintWeek and won the “WorldStar” award in Milan for sustainable packaging and also the ‘Gold’ at the Asian Packaging Excellence Awards. SBP with over 50% market share, is by far the largest company manufacturing hygiene packaging for leading global and Indian brands. SBP also has a strong footprint in the Food and Beverages space.

Premji Invest’s (PI) investments primarily support the philanthropic initiatives of the Azim Premji Foundation, a not-for-profit organisation that seeks to help improve the lives of the underserved and underprivileged in society. PI invests in India and overseas with the objective of building long-term sustainable capital to fund philanthropic initiatives and nurture the spirit of entrepreneurship in the country.  PI invests in sectors including healthcare, technology and financial services, with the overwhelming aim to make sure that global companies with scale are created using the access and capital that PI is able to provide.

June 6, 2023 0 comment
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EnvironmentSustainability

#BeatPlasticPollution this World Environment Day

by Team Conscious Carma June 5, 2023
written by Team Conscious Carma

#BeatPlasticPollution, the theme for World Environment Day 2023, focuses on solution to plastic pollution.

Team Conscious Carma lists down a few environment friendly initiatives by companies and NGOs worth an applause.

NGO Buddh Jyoti Foundation is beating plastic pollution with cloth bags

#BeatPlasticPollution – Going with the theme of this year’s World Environment Day, #BeatPlasticPollution,  Buddh Jyoti Foundation (BJF), a Delhi based NGO, is running a one month campaign to distribute cloth bags in major markets in Delhi NCR.

“More than 400 million tonnes of plastic is produced every year, half of which is designed to be used only once. If we could stop the use of single use plastic, half of the battle is won. Keeping this in mind, BJF is starting a one month campaign to generate awareness among the consumers about the hazards of single use plastics”, Says Kapeel Barsaiyan, President, BJF

“The awareness drive will include visits to the main markets of Delhi NCR and initiating a dialogue with the consumers and presenting them with a Cloth Bag to replace their single use plastic. Awareness is the key to reduce the meance of single use plastic. Plastic clogs our landfills, leaches into the ocean and is combusted into toxic smoke, making it one of the gravest threats to the planet”, adds Kshipra Simon, Secretary General, BJF.

These Cloth bags have been made by the marginalised section of the society. We are glad that this drive has also become a source of income for these women.

Website : https://buddhjyoti.org/

IZZHAAR’s sustainable gifting solutions

World Environment Day is all about celebrating Earth and the lives on it, let us come together as saviours of our planet and appreciate the beauty and wonder of nature that surrounds us. Izzhaar, the creator of natural and sustainable products, encourages you to take part in the conservation of the mother Earth and reduces your share of carbon footprints on the planet.

In the modern era of ever-changing trends, having an ardour for antique and sustainable products is a boom for the environment. Izzhaar as a sustainable gifting solution has a wide range of natural products that not only gives value to your money, but also empowers you to protect and preserve the environment for future generations.

Organic products at Izzhaar are bespoke that are rarely to be found in the general platform of the gifting solutions. The practice of collecting grounded products helps in preserving the natural resources by promoting biodiversity and strengthening ecological resilience.

In addition to the environmental benefits, supporting organic products also contributes to the livelihoods of artisans and communities who rely on sustainable production. By buying organic goods, you help create demand for these products, supporting artisans committed to protecting the environment and promoting sustainable practices.

Website- https://izzhaar.co.in/

Akshayakalpa Organic’s sustainable agriculture and waste management initiatives

Bangalore based Akshayakalpa Organic, India’s first certified organic dairy enterprise is promoting sustainability and environmental responsibility in the food industry through their unique approaches to waste management, responsible packaging, and employee-driven cleanliness drives that create a positive impact on the environment.

Akshayakalpa Organic has pioneered the use of reverse logistics to collect plastic waste directly from their customers’ doorsteps. This game-changing initiative ‘Give Back Milk Pack’ has already resulted in an impressive 8% of the app customer base actively participating in recycling efforts. By utilizing this innovative strategy, the aim is to create a circular economy where plastic waste is responsibly managed and given a new life. So far, they have a record of collecting and recycling 7 tonnes of plastic.

In addition to their plastic waste management efforts, they also have paperboard packaging, which compared to traditional plastic milk packaging, consume significantly less water. Moreover, their commitment to sustainability extends beyond packaging – they actively collect used paperboards, separate the layers, and repurpose them into journals used by their employees, promoting a culture of recycling and upcycling. Furthermore, their dedicated employees actively organize cleanliness drives on a monthly basis, demonstrating the commitment to maintaining a clean and sustainable environment both within the organization and the communities they serve.

Website : https://akshayakalpa.org/

Window Magic manufacturing Eco-friendly uPVC window and Door System

Window Magic is committed to making eco-friendly homes with their uPVC Doors and Windows.

Window Magic has also launched their first-ever sustainability manager, Mr. HOS – High on sustainability. Additionally, they accept full accountability for the waste material produced throughout the manufacturing process and have tied up with GGEPIL, a waste management company. Mr. HOS is helping Window Magic to become a company that genuinely cares about the earth and is responsible.

Website: https://www.windowmagicindia.com/


June 5, 2023 0 comment
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Authored Articles

Women Who Lead: The Likeability Dilemma!

by Team Conscious Carma June 2, 2023
written by Team Conscious Carma

Nona Walia – Are women leaders disadvantaged by ‘likeability bias’ when they take leadership roles? How do we raise a generation of women leaders? What does it take to become a super leader?

How do we perceive women displaying assertiveness, power and strength? Is ‘ambition’ still a dirty word when it comes to women. When women lead, does stereotype bias follow them. Documentarian Robin Hauser has debated the dilemma between competence and likability faced by women in leadership roles. Should women at workplace be bothered by criticism? Why are women in powerful roles labelled as – bossy, arrogant and hyper? Is it time to free women leaders from these gender stereotypes? It seems women have to work twice as hard to be liked at work if they’re in a leadership role. Women who lead – what does it take to create a generation of new women leaders? Can we give girls a conducive environment to grow thereby create more women leaders of tomorrow? Invisibility at work is the biggest setback to your career growth as a potential leader.

Alicia Menendez writes in her book The Likeability Trap, “Women face likeability penalty from hiring to promotions.” Her advice: If you are not rising or getting promoted, look elsewhere. To be both likeable and successful is walking a tough tightrope. Simply craving for success makes women less likeable. At every turn, it seems women are asked to choose between success and likeability. Infact, this likeability trap is what makes women hold themselves back. Stanford professor Deborah Gruenfeld has been exploring alternatives to the narrative of the likeability penalty.

In her work with women leaders at the Graduate School of Business, Gruenfeld finds that too much focus likeability penalty limits women’s focus to the actions required to lead. She urges women to be more confident in their abilities. Instead of focusing on likability, women can find new ways to be successful as leaders, such as sharing what they know, “but in a way that is generous.” Women who lead need to: Balance inclusiveness with decisiveness; cultivate personal agility; recalibrate risk tolerance; learn to get comfortable with power; consider multiple perspectives and practice right communication tone. Be labelled as energetic, problem=solvers and action-oriented.

It is time women rise as leaders in different spheres. Success is nothing but action and attitude. To raise more women leaders, women should not underestimate their value and self-worth. They are unstoppable force, and can direct conversations in the boardroom and within the organization. Psychology Today highlights in an article, “While we place great emphasis on leadership development today, we often do little to address issues of diversity and leadership. These are about competencies as a process as opposed to a specific skill. Learning “who you are” and what of yourself you bring to your leadership is an important first start.”

For women, being a leader is often an oxymoron. The urge to be liked is a powerful force in the workplace. Careers of women depend on who their bosses: Like and don’t like. If a workplace doesn’t align with you, leave. Women need to think themselves to be natural leaders like men.

How Women Can Train to be Leaders:

Be anti-fragile.

Take action.

Don’t miss opportunities. See opportunity in everything.

Learn how to be open, supportive and collaborative.

Learn how to network.

Create a mindset of strength.

Be a magnet of energy and action.

Break unseen barriers.

Enable women to move up.

Push women to take risks.

Women should not be reluctant to speak up or withhold their opinion. Encourage women to speak up and be heard.

Learn empathetic leadership style.

Women should be cheerleaders for other women. Learn to support women.


Be Prepared to Lead

Build courage & strength: Have emotional strength; having the resolve to take risks even if no one else agrees.

Be resilient:  Stand up to being different and overcoming negative perceptions and expectations.

Have authenticity and integrity: You build your own reputation.

Be super confident: Believe in yourself. You don’t have to keep proving yourself.

June 2, 2023 0 comment
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Environment

Ocean plastics: How much do rich countries contribute by shipping their waste overseas?

by Team Conscious Carma May 31, 2023
written by Team Conscious Carma

Many countries ship plastic waste overseas. How much of the world’s waste is traded, and how big is its role in the pollution of our oceans?

by Hannah Ritchie – Most of the plastic that enters the oceans from land comes from rivers in Asia. More than 80% of it.

Only a small amount comes from rivers across Europe and North America. Together, rivers in these regions contribute just 5% of the global total. This would suggest that the world’s richest countries don’t contribute much to the problem of plastic pollution.

But, these numbers only look at the plastic that is emitted domestically. They don’t consider the fact that many countries export plastic waste overseas. If it was the case that the UK exported a lot of its plastic waste to countries where waste management systems are poor, and lots of plastic leaks into the environment, the UK would have a large indirect impact on ocean pollution.

Here is the global data to understand the scale of plastic waste trade. It looks at who the biggest exporters and importers are, and where this waste ends up.

It is estimated that a few percent – possibly up to 5% – of the world’s ocean plastics could come from rich countries exporting their waste overseas. That could bring the total up to 10%: 5% directly from rivers in these regions, plus a further 5% from trade.

How much of the world’s plastic waste is traded? Importing plastics can often bring economic benefits. Recycled plastics can be repurposed into other goods, and fed into manufacturing industries. This is often cheaper than buying or making virgin plastics from scratch.

In 2020, around 5 million tonnes of plastic waste was traded globally.3 We might imagine that the pandemic forced a large reduction in plastic trade, but this doesn’t seem to be the case. In 2019, rates were only slightly higher, at around 6 million tonnes. Let’s put those 5 million tonnes into context. The world generates around 350 million tonnes of plastic waste per year. That means that around 2% of waste is traded.

The remaining 98% is handled domestically. It’s sent to a landfill, recycled, or incinerated in the country where the waste was generated. The idea that most of the world’s plastic waste is shipped overseas is incorrect. One reason why this figure is so low is that it’s mostly recycled waste that’s traded, and only 20% of the world’s plastic is recycled. Over the last decade, we’ve seen a large decline in the amount of plastic waste traded. Rates have fallen by two-thirds since 2010.

Plastic waste exports, 2007 to 2021

What was the impact of the Chinese ban on plastic trade?

Policies in China toward plastic trade have had a large impact on the global change shown in the previous chart. In 2016, China was importing more than half of the world’s traded plastic waste. By 2018, this had plummeted to less than 1%. We see this in the chart.

The reason for this dramatic decline was the Chinese government banning the import of most types of plastic waste in 2017. This was part of a broader policy decision to stop the import of 24 different types of solid waste including paper, textiles, and plastics. These bans were implemented as a result of environmental and health concerns from contaminated waste streams.

This ban had two major impacts.6 The first was that the total volume of plastic trade globally dropped significantly – we saw earlier that global trade has halved since 2017. The second was that other countries emerged to take China’s place as major importers. Most of them are also countries in Asia – Malaysia, Vietnam, Indonesia, the Philippines, and Turkey, started to import much more plastic than in previous years.

Most plastic waste is traded within world regions, rather than between them
Where does plastic waste flow across the world?

Europe is the region that exports the most plastic, but it’s also the region that imports the most.
This is true more generally. Most plastic is traded within a given region. European countries
export most plastic to other European countries. Asian countries export most to other Asian
countries.

In the visualization, we see the flow of plastic across the world.7 On the left we have the exporters of plastic waste; on the right, we see where that plastic ends up. The height of each bar is proportional to the amount of plastic that is traded.

Europe is the biggest exporter of plastic. But, it’s also the biggest importer. Many countries across Europe trade with one another. At the national level, Germany is the biggest exporter and importer – it trades different plastics with its neighbors including the Netherlands, Poland, Austria, and Switzerland.

This is also true of Asia, where Japan is the biggest exporter to other countries in Asia.

Do rich countries export most of their plastic waste overseas?

Many people think that rich countries ship most of their plastic waste overseas. But is this really true?
The short answer is no: many countries export some of their waste, but they still handle most of it domestically.

Let’s take the example of the UK. In 2010, it generated an estimated 4.93 million tonnes of plastic waste.9 It exported 838,000 tonnes overseas.  That means it exported about 17% of its plastic waste. That’s a substantial fraction – nearly one-fifth of it.

This data is for 2010, a year with good high-quality estimates of plastic waste generation. It’s still likely to be a reasonable estimate today. If anything, this share might have declined slightly, because waste exports have not increased, and waste generation probably has.

When it comes to the fraction of plastic waste that is exported, the UK is one of the largest exporters. For context, the US exported about 5% of its plastic waste in 2010. France exported 11%, and the Netherlands exported 14%.

Most rich countries are net exporters of plastic waste. And this can be a significant fraction of their waste. But it’s not the case that they handle most of it by offshoring it to other countries.

How much do rich countries contribute to plastic pollution through their exported waste?
This is the crucial question. While we don’t have an exact answer, we can give a plausible range.

To give an exact answer we would need to trace each piece of plastic pollution back to its original source. But we can do some calculations to estimate how much plastic is at higher risk of entering the ocean because of this trade. 

In 2020, low-to-middle-income countries – where plastic waste was at a ‘higher risk’ of entering the ocean (because of poorer waste management systems) – imported around 1.6 million tonnes of plastic waste from rich countries. Here ‘rich countries’ include all countries in Europe and North America, plus Japan, Hong Kong, and OECD countries from other regions.

How much of this plastic ends up in the ocean?
Again, we don’t know for sure. But we can run through a worst and best-case scenario.

Here we will assume that all of this traded waste was ‘mismanaged’, meaning it was not formally managed and was either littered or dumped in open landfills. In reality, not all of it will be mismanaged, but let’s be conservative here.

The probability that mismanaged waste ends up in the ocean varies a lot by country. The country where the probability is highest is the Phillippines – an estimated 7% ends up in the ocean.11 We could imagine this being our ‘worst-case’ scenario: if rich countries exported all of their plastic trade to the Philippines, 7% of it might end up in the ocean. That would be 112,000 tonnes.

In a ‘best-case’ scenario, only around 1% of mismanaged waste would end up in the ocean. Most countries across the world have a risk of just under 1%. In Asia, this would be typical of countries such as Thailand and Cambodia. In this ‘best-case’ scenario, around 16,000 tonnes of ocean plastics each year would enter the ocean from trade.

This gives us an upper and lower bound for the contribution of trade from rich countries. Since around one million tonnes of plastic enters the ocean each year, rich countries would contribute between 1.6% (in the best case) and 11% (in the worst case) of ocean plastics through shipping waste overseas.

The true figure probably falls somewhere in between. A reasonable estimate might be around 5% of ocean plastics. In reality, it might be a bit lower because a tonne of waste that is bought and traded is more likely to be managed well than the average tonne of waste in a country.

I estimate that a few percent of ocean plastics could result from trade from rich countries. A figure as high as 5% would not be unreasonable.

Ending plastic trade would only do a bit to reduce plastic pollution – what is needed are better waste-management systems. Stopping exports of plastic waste to countries with poor waste management would help to tackle ocean pollution. 

If rich countries banned the export of plastic waste to these countries, we might reduce plastic pollution a bit: perhaps up to 5%. But, an end to trade won’t stop plastic pollution. Only a small fraction of the world’s plastic waste is traded – under 2%. And most – two-thirds of it – ends up in richer countries, where it’s very unlikely to end up in the ocean.

There are obvious reasons to reduce these exports beyond the plastic pollution problem. Countries have been guilty of exporting contaminated recycling plastic packages – one of the drivers for countries to ban plastic imports. This is unacceptable: poorer countries are not a dumping ground for the rich.

Most of the world’s waste is handled domestically and most of the waste that enters the oceans stems from these countries. To really tackle the problem we need to do two things: scale waste management systems in rich countries; the fact that they are exporting waste overseas suggests they have under-invested in practices at home; and, importantly, improve waste management infrastructure and practices in low-to-middle-income countries, as this is where most plastic pollution originates.

May 31, 2023 0 comment
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Sustainability

How to Live A Simpler Sustainable Life in 2023!

by Team Conscious Carma May 25, 2023
written by Team Conscious Carma

Nona Walia – Recycled home decor, no make-up days, zero-waste, reducing consumption, living a sustainable life isn’t easy. Everything you need to know to make small changes that make a big difference. Here’s your Sustainable Living Guide!

What does “Sustainable Living” actually look like in practice? Is it very tough, easy or highly challenging. You might be a chef trying to manage wastage or entrepreneur making critical decisions, living sustainably can be a huge challenge. According to a report, in 2022, “recycled home decor” and “zero waste lifestyle” increased by 95% in searches on Pinterest. Sustainable is a term that now can describe everything from our food, make-up, clothing, mattresses, couches to tampons and ziplocks.

We are now witnessing capitalisation of the sustainability era. Everything packaged in words like nontoxic, organic, or eco-friendly – is actually more expensive. Can we live a sustainable life without increasing our expenditure.  Let’s have a minimal slow life, slow vacations; a life where we return to minimalism is much more preferred rather than the fancy industrialisation of the world sustainability. Christine Platt, author of The Afrominimalist’s Guide to Living With Less. “There’s also a difference between people who are minimalist and sustainable by choice, and those who are so by circumstance.”

Don’t try to indulge in over expensive sustainability fads. You will do more damage. Living sustainably is a lifestyle that reduces our environmental impact in many ways, from the food we buy to the daily commute. By making some small changes to your lifestyle, you can reduce your carbon footprint and help to tackle these issues. You simply need to do whatever works for you and remember that the small things matter. In her book The Sustainable Living Guide, author Jen Gale talks about ways to fit sustainable living into your life, “To change your impact without radically changing your life. It starts with changing habits that we built up over years without thinking about the impact.”

Don’t go with the notion that living sustainably is more expensive and tough. Take baby steps, we show you how!

Start Small: Nobody canlive a 100% sustainable life. Ditch that (plastic) bottled water, or those canned foods. Free yourself from packaged foods.

Replace and Recycle: Have a culture of reusing things. Mending things. Keep reusable bottle/cup and carry one with you on your travels, or your way to work. And try to implement a reduced plastic consumption in your life. Ditch that plastic toothbrush.

Slow Walking: Enjoy the joy of walking.  Move. Track: Your garbage and waste, check your CO2 footprint. There are many websites and apps, protect the climate.

Try to use Shampoo bars: They are natural and don’t use plastic bottles.

Make sustainable choices: When shopping, travelling and eating out. Purchase consciously.

Recycle your trash properly. Choose biodegradable alternatives, when purchasing home-products and disposing off things you don’t need. Be aware how you throw things.

Eat seasonal: Eat local and seasonal, in-season fruits and veggies are healthier and more nourishing in vitamins.

Stop any wastage: Golden rule here is:  Don’t buy more than you need. Don’t order more at a restaurant, than you can eat.

Connect with nature and appreciate all that it does, in order for us to exist on this planet.

Choose Eco-Friendly Furniture: Buy pieces that are made locally, by local craftspeople, and from new or repurposed sustainable materials.

Purchase Energy-Efficient Appliances: Using Energy Star-rated home appliances is an easy way to reduce your carbon footprint. If you have an old fridge or washer/dryer that’s not Energy Star certified, consider replacing it with one that is.

Try some Reusable Packaging: It’s always nice having a stainless water bottle around because it makes you feel better about yourself every time you drink from it.

Compost: Composting is a great way to reduce waste. It also helps you grow your own food and reduce the amount of food that goes to landfills. The sweeter part is that you can compost in your backyard, on your balcony, or even indoors.

Try to use Shampoo bars: They are natural and don’t use plastic bottles.

Experiment with Vegan footwear:  Fashion footwear too is having a sustainability moment.  Shraddha Joshi, founder of SoleWeavers has launched her Vegan footwear, “We carefully source our raw materials within India to craft shoes responsibly. In shoe-making, we ensure that every raw material is efficiently used and there is no harm to any life. Proud to say that we are a cruelty-free, homegrown brand that not only cares for the quality we offer to the people but also cares for the planet.”

Make your life greener: Be it cooking or cleaning, make kinder choices. Love your leftovers. Look at what basics you’re binning.

Reduce your washing: Author Erin Rhoads’ book Waste Not Everyday points out that “the majority of the environmental burden caused by fashion happens after we take the clothing home: 82% of the energy a garment will use is in the washing and drying we do each week”.

Plant something: Every month, plant something. Whether it’s a vegetable garden, flowers or some trees, adding some greenery to your life is a simple way to make a positive impact on the environment. Add greenery to every corner and room.

May 25, 2023 0 comment
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EnvironmentGlobal News

UN roadmap outlines solutions to cut global plastic pollution  

by Team Conscious Carma May 17, 2023
written by Team Conscious Carma

Nairobi, 16 May 2023 – Plastic pollution could reduce by 80 per cent by 2040 if countries and companies make deep policy and market shifts using existing technologies, according to a new report by UN Environment Programme (UNEP). The report is released ahead of a second round of negotiations in Paris on a global agreement to beat plastic pollution, and outlines the magnitude and nature of the changes required to end plastic pollution and create a circular economy.  

Turning off the Tap: How the world can end plastic pollution and create a circular economy is a solutions-focused analysis of concrete practices, market shifts, and policies that can inform government thinking and business action.  

“The way we produce, use and dispose of plastics is polluting ecosystems, creating risks for human health and destabilizing the climate,” said Inger Andersen, UNEP Executive Director. “This UNEP report lays out a roadmap to dramatically reduces these risks through adopting a circular approach that keeps plastics out of ecosystems, out of our bodies and in the economy. If we follow this roadmap, including in negotiations on the plastic pollution deal, we can deliver major economic, social and environmental wins.” 

Market shifts needed for the market transformation toward circularity  

To slash plastic pollution by 80 per cent globally by 2040, the report suggests first eliminating problematic and unnecessary plastics to reduce the size of the problem. Subsequently, the report calls for three market shifts – reuse, recycle and reorient and diversify products:  

1.     Reuse: Promoting reuse options, including refillable bottles, bulk dispensers, deposit-return-schemes, packaging take-back schemes etc., can reduce 30 per cent of plastic pollution by 2040. To realize its potential, governments must help build a stronger business case for reusables. 

2.     Recycle: Reducing plastic pollution by an additional 20 per cent by 2040 can be achieved if recycling becomes a more stable and profitable venture. Removing fossil fuels subsidies, enforcing design guidelines to enhance recyclability, and other measures would increase the share of economically recyclable plastics from 21 to 50 per cent. 

3.     Reorient and diversify: Careful replacement of products such as plastic wrappers, sachets and takeaway items with products made from alternative materials (such as paper or compostable materials) can deliver an additional 17 per cent decrease in plastic pollution.  

Even with the measures above, 100 million metric tons of plastics from single-use and short-lived products will still need to be safely dealt with annually by 2040 – together with a significant legacy of existing plastic pollution. This can be addressed by setting and implementing design and safety standards for disposing of non-recyclable plastic waste, and by making manufacturers responsible for products shedding microplastics, among others.  

Overall, theshift to a circular economy would result in USD 1.27 trillion in savings, considering costs and recycling revenues. A further USD 3.25 trillion would be saved from avoided externalities such as health, climate, air pollution, marine ecosystem degradation, and litigation-related costs. This shift could also result in a net increase of 700,000 jobs by 2040, mostly in low-income countries, significantly improving the livelihoods of millions of workers in informal settings. 

Investment costs for the recommended systemic change are significant, but below the spending without this systemic change: USD 65 billion per year as opposed to USD 113 billion per year. Much of this can be mobilized by shifting planned investments for new production facilities ­– no longer needed through reduction in material needs – or a levy on virgin plastic production into the necessary circular infrastructure. Yet time is of the essence: a five-year delay may lead to an increase of 80 million metric tons of plastic pollution by 2040.  

The highest costs in both a throwaway and circular economy are operational. With regulation to ensure plastics are designed to be circular, Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) schemes can cover these operational costs of ensuring the system’s circularity through requiring producers to finance the collection, recycling and responsible end-of-life disposal of plastic products.  

single use plastic dump

Internationally agreed policies can help overcome the limits of national planning and business action, sustain a flourishing circular global plastics economy, unlock business opportunities and create jobs. These may include agreed criteria for plastic products that could be banned, a cross-border knowledge baseline, rules on necessary minimum operating standards of EPR schemes and other standards.  

The report recommends that a global fiscal framework could be part of international policies to enable recycled materials to compete on a level playing field with virgin materials, create an economy of scale for solutions, and establish monitoring systems and financing mechanisms.  

Crucially, policymakers are encouraged to embrace an approach that integrates regulatory instruments and policies tackling actions across the life cycle, as these are mutually reinforcing towards the goal of transforming the economy. For example, design rules to make products economically recyclable can be combined with targets to incorporate recycled content and fiscal incentives for recycling plants. 

The report also addresses specific policies, including standards for design, safety, and compostable and biodegradable plastics; targets for minimum recycling; EPR schemes; taxes; bans; communication strategies; public procurement, and labeling.   

About the UN Environment Programme (UNEP) 

UNEP is the leading global voice on the environment. It provides leadership and encourages partnership in caring for the environment by inspiring, informing and enabling nations and peoples to improve their quality of life without compromising that of future generations. 

May 17, 2023 0 comment
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CampaignsEvents

Honoring Mothers – A tribute to Mother Earth & Mother Cow

by Team Conscious Carma May 10, 2023
written by Team Conscious Carma

What comes to your mind when you hear the word MOTHER?

✅ your beloved MOM
✅ Mother Earth
✅ Motherland
✅ Mother Cow
✅ Maa Ganga

This is the beauty of our culture. From our Motherland to our Mother Cow, we respect every aspect of the Creation that nurture us.
Paying tribute to all Mothers this MOTHER’S DAY, let’s delve deeper into our rich culture and understand their importance

Block your date for Instagram live on Saturday, May 13th, 5 pm IST

May 10, 2023 0 comment
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