The Food Safety and Standards Authority of India (FSSAI) has issued final authorisation to 17 recycled polyethylene terephthalate (r-PET) manufacturing plants.
The move comes amid packaging material shortages linked to the ongoing conflict in West Asia.
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Among the companies receiving authorisation are Dodhia Industries, Ganesha Ecopet, JB Ecotex, Ribotl Solutions, and Srichakra Polyplast.
The newly authorised plants add a collective capacity of 300,000 tonnes to India’s circular packaging infrastructure.
This development coincides with efforts to meet the nation’s target for using 40% recycled content by 2026–2027.
A statement from the Association of PET Recyclers (APR) Bharat said: “The FSSAI’s move granting final licences will help strengthen India’s packaging supply chain at a time when virgin PET faces global pressures in the wake of the Iran-Israel war.”
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By GlobalDataThe additional capacity is expected to support the needs of sectors such as beverage bottling, which require food-grade packaging solutions.
Under the Plastic Waste Management Rules, 2016 (as amended), India requires at least 30% recycled content in rigid plastic packaging beginning in 2025–2026.
This threshold will increase incrementally by 10% each year until it reaches 60% by 2028–2029.
India now has approximately 15–18 food-grade r-PET recycling facilities with a total estimated capacity of around 300,000 tonnes and investment between Rs90bn ($974.4m) and Rs100bn.
APR Bharat director general Goutham Jain commented: “With these 17 r-PET manufacturing plants receiving final authorisations, there will be surplus r-PET available in the market. This can help fill any gap in the supply of polymers due to the ongoing war and volatility in global markets.”
