CURRENT AFFAIRS | MAY 5, 2026
A new 2026 industry study estimates that India loses approximately Rs 51,000 crore every year through unrecovered material value in informally handled e-waste. India is now the third-largest e-waste generator globally — behind China and the United States — yet only about 22% of this stream is formally recycled under the centralised CPCB Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) portal mandated by the E-Waste (Management) Rules 2022. The findings expose enforcement gaps in EPR compliance and highlight the legal architecture under the Environment (Protection) Act 1986.
Why This Matters Right Now
The Rs 51,000 crore figure represents recoverable copper, gold, palladium, rare earths and aluminium that are leaking into informal scrapyards — typically dismantled by acid baths and open-air burning, with severe occupational and environmental costs. The CPCB’s online EPR portal, operational since 2022, was designed to digitise producer-recycler-refurbisher reporting; the gap shows that compliance, not architecture, is the bottleneck.
Constitutional Framework
- Article 48A (DPSP) — State shall endeavour to protect and improve the environment.
- Article 51A(g) — Fundamental Duty of citizens to protect the natural environment.
- Article 21 — Right to a healthy environment, read in Subhash Kumar v State of Bihar (1991).
- Environment (Protection) Act 1986 — Parent statute for E-Waste Rules 2022.
- Polluter pays + Precautionary principle — Vellore Citizens Welfare Forum v UoI (1996).
CLAT Angle
Strong fact-pattern territory for legal-reasoning passages on Extended Producer Responsibility, the polluter-pays principle and Article 48A’s status as a non-justiciable Directive Principle that is nonetheless judicially enforceable when read with Article 21. Expect mock questions on whether informal recyclers can be “producers” within the EPR scheme, and on Constitutional Bench applications of Vellore Citizens.
Key Facts
| Element | Detail |
|---|---|
| Annual loss | Approx Rs 51,000 crore |
| Global rank | 3rd largest e-waste generator |
| Formal recycling rate | Approx 22% |
| Governing rules | E-Waste (Management) Rules 2022 |
| Parent Act | Environment (Protection) Act 1986 |
| Compliance portal | Centralised CPCB EPR portal |
Mnemonic — “51 K = EPR”
Rs 51,000 cr lost = Extended Producer Responsibility gap. Three doctrines to recall: Polluter-Pays, Precautionary, Public-Trust — the “Three Ps” of Indian environmental law.
Practice Quiz — 10 Questions
Test your understanding of e-waste rules, EPR doctrine, and Articles 48A / 51A(g).
Practice Quiz — 10 CLAT-Style Questions
Click an option to reveal the answer and explanation.
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