The Hindu 17.07.2013
Udupi to take up scheme to segregate waste at source in a month’s time

The Udupi City Municipal Council (CMC) is set to take up
a pilot project of waste segregation at source in 3,000 houses in a
month’s time.
Under the pilot project, these houses
would be given two buckets — one red-coloured, and the other green.
Residents would be instructed to put bio-degradable or wet waste into
the green bucket, while plastic, glass and paper material would have to
be put in the red bucket.
SHGs help
These
buckets would be collected daily by members of Self Help Groups (SHGs)
and the biodegradable waste would be taken for processing and
land-filling at the 22-acre solid waste management plant (SWMP) in
Alevoor village.
Plastic waste
Plastic, glass and other material will be sold to scrap-dealers for recycling.
“People
of these 3,000 houses would have to pay Rs. 30 per month to the SHGs
for collection of the waste. The aim of the pilot project is to make the
citizens aware of the importance of waste segregation,” said
Subrahmanya M.K., environment engineer of the the City Municipal
Council.
Udupi city generates 58 tonnes of garbage
everyday. Of this, 7.12 tonnes is plastic waste, comprising carry bags
and cups. There are 32,000 households in the city.
The
Udupi CMC banned the use of all kinds of plastic, including carry bags
and cups, on September 15, 2012. However, a few private companies
approached court and got a stay order against the ban.
Consequently, plastic material have once again made a come-back.
“The CMC has appealed against the stay order,” said CMC Commissioner Gokuldas Nayak.
Cloth and paper bags were being used by the people during the period when plastic was banned in the city.
According
to Mr. Subrahmanya, during the six months of the ban period, the use of
plastic material had come down by nearly 75 per cent.
Segregation
of waste at source would save the CMC time and money. The CMC spends
Rs. 1,320 (including wages, vehicle cost and transportation charges) to
process one tonne of garbage.
Now, residents put all
the waste — both wet and dry — in big plastic carry bags, which are then
collected by the SHGs and sent to Alevoor. “Since the waste has to be
removed from these bags and then segregated, a lot of time is wasted. If
wet waste is available straight away, it can be processed and be used
for land-filling,” Mr. Subrahmanya said.
The CMC took
up waste segregation at source in about 250 houses on an experimental
basis about two years ago. “But we did not follow it up as we expected
the Waste to Energy (WTE) Project to materialise, and it did not require
waste segregation. But the project has got delayed for various
reasons,” said Mr. Nayak.