LG, Samsung Sue Indian Government Over Electronic-Waste Pricing Policy

India is the third-biggest e-waste generator behind China and the US.

Advertisement
By Reuters | Updated: 22 April 2025 15:15 IST
Highlights
  • 43 percent of India' e-waste last year was recycled
  • LG's court filing showed it wrote to the Indian government in August
  • Samsung filing expands 345 pages

Samsung and LG had lobbied against a decision to fix a floor price payable to recyclers

South Korea's LG and Samsung have sued India's government to quash a policy which increases payouts to electronic-waste recyclers, court filings show, joining other major companies in contesting the country's environmental rules citing business impact.

The lawsuits, set to be heard on Tuesday with other challenges, mark an escalation of a standoff involving foreign companies' and Prime Minister Narendra Modi's government over its stance towards waste management practices.

LG and Samsung did not respond to Reuters' requests for comment. India's Environment Ministry also did not respond.

Advertisement

India is the third-biggest e-waste generator behind China and the US, but the government says only 43 percent of the country's e-waste last year was recycled and at least 80 percent of the sector comprises informal scrap dealers.

Advertisement

Daikin, India's Havells and Tata's Voltas have already sued PM Modi's administration.

Samsung and LG had lobbied against a decision to fix a floor price payable to recyclers, which New Delhi says is needed to get more formal players into the sector and boost investment in e-waste recycling.  

Advertisement

LG's filing in the Delhi High Court, which is not public but was reviewed by Reuters on Monday, said the pricing rules "fail to take into consideration that merely by fleecing companies and taxing them in the name of the 'polluter pays principle', the (government) objectives sought to be achieved cannot be achieved." 

"(If) the authorities have not been able to regulate the informal sector, then it is an enforcement failure," the 550-page court filing from April 16 showed.    

Advertisement

Samsung in its 345-page filing, seen by Reuters, said: "The regulation of prices does not inherently serve the purposes of environmental protection," and said this was "expected to cause substantial financial impact."

India's new rules mandate a minimum payment of 22 rupees (25 US cents) per kilogram to recycle consumer electronics. Electronics companies say that will roughly triple their costs and benefit recyclers at their expense.    

LG's court filing showed it wrote to the Indian government in August saying the proposed rates were "very high and should be reduced" and the government should let market forces determine the prices.

Samsung wrote to PM Modi's office last year, the company's court filing showed, saying the new pricing was "5-15 times the price currently paid." 

Research firm Redseer said India's recycling rates were still low compared with the US, where they are up to five times higher, and China, where they at least 1.5 times higher.    

Indian air conditioner maker, Blue Star, has also filed a lawsuit challenging the rules, citing compliance burdens, its court filings, seen by Reuters, showed.

Johnson Controls-Hitachi has moved to withdraw its lawsuit in recent days without giving reasons, based on court filings seen by Reuters.

Blue Star and Johnson Controls-Hitachi did not respond to requests for comment.

© Thomson Reuters 2025

(This story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

 

Get your daily dose of tech news, reviews, and insights, in under 80 characters on Gadgets 360 Turbo. Connect with fellow tech lovers on our Forum. Follow us on X, Facebook, WhatsApp, Threads and Google News for instant updates. Catch all the action on our YouTube channel.

Advertisement

Related Stories

Popular Mobile Brands
  1. OTT Releases of the Week (Feb 16 - Feb 22): Know What to Watch This Weekend
  2. Realme P4 Lite With 6,300mAh Battery Launched at This Price in India
  3. WhatsApp's New Feature Allows New Members to View Past Group Messages
  4. Nothing Confirms the Upcoming Phone 4a Series Will Sport a Snapdragon Chip
  5. Google Chrome Now Lets You Annotate PDFs, View Tabs in Split View
  6. Samsung Galaxy Buds 4 Leak Again as Dummy Units Surface Online
  7. Vivo V70 Elite Review: Vivo's V-Series Goes 'Elite'
  8. Samsung's One UI 8.5 Update Will Bring These Useful Upgrades to Bixby
  9. Redmi Buds 8 Active Price, Design, Key Features Leaked Ahead of Launch
  10. First User Report of iPhone Air's C1X Modem Failure Surfaces Online
  1. Google Blocked 266 Million Risky App Installs, Prevented 1.75 Million Policy-Violating Apps in 2025
  2. Google Releases Gemini 3.1 Pro With Ability to Execute Complex Tasks; Pomelli Gets New Photoshoot Feature
  3. Xiaomi 17T Pro, Xiaomi 17T Tipped to Launch Earlier Than Previously Expected, Chipset Details Leaked
  4. Google Chrome Updated With Split View, Built-In PDF Markup Tools, and More Features
  5. Realme P4 Lite Launched in India With 6,300mAh Battery, 13-Megapixel Camera: Price, Specifications
  6. Samsung Galaxy Buds 4 Leak Again as Dummy Units Surface Online: Expected Price, Features
  7. Sony to Shut Down Demon's Souls Remake Developer Bluepoint Games in March
  8. Amazfit T-Rex Ultra 2 Launched With BioTracker 6.0 Sensor, 1.5-Inch AMOLED Display
  9. iPhone Air User Complains of C1X Modem Failure, Claims Mobile Diagnostics Suggests Hardware Issue
  10. Redmi Buds 8 Active Price, Design, Key Features Leaked Ahead of Anticipated Launch
Gadgets 360 is available in
Download Our Apps
Available in Hindi
© Copyright Red Pixels Ventures Limited 2026. All rights reserved.