Inbound, outbound tourism has grown exponentially over the past year with residents looking to travel more, but airlines are still facing a capacity constraint
Officials and industry players note that tourists of the future consider regions rather than individual destinations, as travel has become easier and faster now
New Delhi [India], April 29 (ANI/NewsVoir): Plastic waste has been one of the most significant environmental problems challenging humankind. Experts have realised that conventional plastics, which takes several hundred years to degrade are a critical ecological hazard. As per the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) report, about 85 per cent of plastics turn into unregulated waste reaching oceans and landfills, and only 10 per cent of plastics ever produced globally have ever been recycled. While the Reduce, Reuse, Recycle (RRR) is often claimed to be one of the most optimum mantras to solve the problem, it has yet to be effective. Banning plastics isn't a solution. The real fix lies in not moving to extremes but adopting the new technological advancements in plastic manufacturing. The answer today comes in designing and producing a better version of biodegradable plastics using d2W additives by Symphony Environmental, India. d2w uses pro-degradant in the form of masterbatch
New Delhi [India], April 29 (ANI/NewsVoir): Plastic waste has been one of the most significant environmental problems challenging humankind. Experts have realised that conventional plastics, which takes several hundred years to degrade are a critical ecological hazard. As per the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) report, about 85 per cent of plastics turn into unregulated waste reaching oceans and landfills, and only 10 per cent of plastics ever produced globally have ever been recycled. While the Reduce, Reuse, Recycle (RRR) is often claimed to be one of the most optimum mantras to solve the problem, it has yet to be effective.
Symphony Environmental claims its oxo-biodegradable additive allows PE- and PP- and plastic packaging will degrade harmlessly without creating microplastics.