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Solid Waste Management

Segregation of waste at source begins

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The Hindu         18.11.2014

Segregation of waste at source begins

Inspired by the success of the Shunya Project in R.S. Puram, residents of Bharathi Park led by the Bharathi Park Ladies Association have begun segregating waste. On Monday they launched the Shunya Project — zero waste management scheme where the waste is segregated at source — in the presence of Mayor P. Rajkumar, who promised the Coimbatore Corporation’s support.

The association president Premi Balu said that the project would begin with residents in the Bharathi Park Eighth and Seventh Cross and links roads there — about 200 houses. Mr. Rajkumar said that the main culprit for the poor waste management was plastics, which prevented decomposition of organic waste.

He appreciated the steps taken in The Nilgiris, where plastics was banned.

R. Raveendran of the Residents Awareness Association of Coimbatore said that the organisation would join hands with Siruthuli to implement the scheme across the city.

The residents would get bins and bags for segregating waste. The ITC under its Wealth out of Waste programme would collect the dry waste from the residents.

The corporation had implemented the Shunya Project in R.S. Puram, where door-to-door collection of segregated waste had led to the removal of bins in the area.

 

Waste management scheme: documents missing

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The Hindu            06.11.2014  

Waste management scheme: documents missing

Karthik Madhavan

The tender document and papers related to the solid waste management scheme, executed on behalf of the Coimbatore Corporation by the Coimbatore Integrated Waste Management Private Limited, are missing.

During a thorough review of the scheme, the Corporation officials learnt to their dismay that the tender document, based on which the civic body inked the agreement with the company was missing.

This was immediately brought to the notice of senior officials who reportedly were contemplating the next course of action, including lodging a police complaint.

Sources said that a thorough probe by the police might bring to light the involvement of insiders – Corporation staff – who, the officials suspect could have taken away the documents.

Only a few days ago, the Coimbatore Corporation learnt that the company had not fulfilled its bank guarantee and soon thereafter Commissioner S. Ganesh had issued notice to the company. He had also issued notice for poor performance in the Vellalore dump yard in that the company was not producing compost in the quantity it ought to produce by processing wet waste.

The Corporation had inked an agreement more than five years ago for over Rs. 100 crore with the company for transporting waste from transit stations to the Vellalore dump yard and processing the waste there.

The task of collecting waste from the streets and taking them to the transit stations - primary collection – was with the Corporation.

On an average, the Coimbatore Corporation collected and sent over 800 tonnes of waste a day to the dump yard. The company was supposed to segregate the waste into degradable, non-degradable and rejects and make compost the degradable waste, recycle the non-degradable waste and use in landfill the rejects.

The allegation against the company was that it was not segregating and processing the waste as agreed and just dumped the waste as it received. Residents of Vellalore, Mahalingapuram and other areas near the dump yard have been accusing the Corporation of not carrying out the waste management in a transparent manner.

 

Energy generation from waste in Gobi Municipality soon

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The Hindu      06.11.2014  

Energy generation from waste in Gobi Municipality soon

The Gobichettipalayam Municipality that is into construction of a bio-methanisation plant envisaging energy generation using wastes generated from fruit and vegetable markets has completed nearly 70 per cent of the works.

In all likelihood, the innovative initiative for solid waste management will be operational by December, G. Dhanalakshmi. Commissioner of Gobi Municipality, said.

Machineries have been erected and a dry run of biogas generation would be carried out before formal commissioning, the Commissioner said. The local body intends to utilise the energy generated at the plant for running the motor and fulfilling lighting requirements at the compost yard.

The scope for bottling the gas and selling it to the public, in case of excess production, would also be explored, Ms. Dhanalakshmi said.

In the meantime, the Municipality is looking at the possibility of shifting the compost yard to another location since the 1.5 acre space at the existing spot is too small for the burgeoning population, Ms. Dhanalakshmi said.

 


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