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New KMC team chalks out green drive for city

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The Times of India      21.06.2010

New KMC team chalks out green drive for city

KOLKATA: The new Kolkata Municipal Corporation board is ready to draw up plans to protect and increase the green cover of the city.

The KMC authorities will sit with forest department officials in a day or two to chalk out a comprehensive plan on this count. MMiC (parks and squares) Debasish Kumar said the process to identify spots where saplings needed to be planted would soon begin.

"The stress won't be on how many new tress have been planted. Our aim will be to protect the trees that have already been planted," Kumar said, adding that efforts would be made to save at least 85% of the existing trees in the city.

KMC also wants to revive and revamp its own nurseries. "Over the past few years, the KMC nurseries have not been functioning properly and there's been a drastic fall in the number of saplings. We may buy saplings from forest department nurseries, but we'll try to use our own resources," said Kumar.

The truth is, afforestation and tree plantation programmes are conducted every year, but the city's green cover has been shrinking rapidly. A forest department survey a few years ago had pegged the city's green cover at just 10%, while the latest estimates put this at 8%.

The MMiC and other civic leaders know that to actually make a difference, there has to be a crackdown on illegal felling of trees for construction activities and putting up billboards. The effect of this can be seen more in the suburbs, especially along VIP Road and EM Bypass, where the land shark-civic authority nexus and a total lack of planning has turned green neighbourhoods into concrete jungles.

But to stop this, a concerted effort involving various KMC departments is required. Citizens want to know if the new board is ready to take these tough measures.

Forest department officials say that despite regular plantation programmes, the lack of adequate compensatory plantation has resulted in the loss of greenery. "According to rules, at least five new trees must be planted for every tree felled, but such rules are hardly followed. Also, the forest department should be informed before trees are cut down," said an official.
 

Plans afoot to make State ‘plastic-free'

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The Hindu        11.06.2010

Plans afoot to make State ‘plastic-free'

Staff Correspondent

Solid Waste Management plant inaugurated in Kundapur


‘37 per cent of people in the State live in

urban areas'

Government committed to improving amenities in urban areas, says Acharya


Kundapur (Udupi District): Minister for Law, Parliamentary Affairs and Urban Development S. Suresh Kumar said on Wednesday that the Government was planning to make Karnataka a plastic-free State.

He was speaking at the inauguration of the Solid Waste Management plant of the Kundapur Town Municipal Council (TMC) at Kandavar village here.

Mr. Kumar said that disposal of plastic material was a problem. Many people burnt plastic while disposing off garbage. The smoke emanating while burning plastic was hazardous to health. Plastic was responsible for environmental pollution.

Urban local bodies should ban the use of plastic material. “If Kundapur TMC bans the use of plastic and makes Kundapur a ‘plastic-free town', I will ensure that the Government gives it an award,” he said. Urban local bodies should give priority to provision of drinking water, cleanliness and creating an environment where people could live peacefully, Mr. Kumar said.

Home Minister V.S. Acharya, who inaugurated the plant, said that nearly 37 per cent of people in the State lived in urban areas. The Government was committed to improving civic amenities in urban areas. Hence, it was providing maximum funds to all the 218 urban local bodies in the State, he said.

The Government had granted Rs. 30 crore for development of Udupi city and Rs. 5 crore for the development of Kundapur town. Additional funds had been granted to municipal corporations in the State, he said.

Survey

Survey for the underground drainage facility in Kundapur would be completed in six months and funds would be released for its implementation, he said, and complimented the Kundapur TMC for bagging the national award for good governance.

A mobile traffic police station would be inaugurated in Kundapur on June 13. Nearly 20 police quarters had been built in Byndoor. A new building for the Kollur police station would soon be constructed, Dr. Acharya said.

MLC Kota Srinivas Poojary, Chairman of Task Force for Implementation of Third Finance Commission Report A.G. Kodgi and president of Kundapur TMC Mohandas Shenoy were present.

Last Updated on Friday, 11 June 2010 01:33
 

Mysore awaits fuel, perfume from plastic waste

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Deccan Herald      10.06.2010

Process may offer long-term solution to disposing of solid refuse
Mysore awaits fuel, perfume from plastic waste
Preethi Nagaraj, Mysore, June 9, DH News Service:

The Mysore City Corporation (MCC), basking in glory after the city was recently adjudged the second cleanest in India, is planning to turn the place into a “zero waste” zone.

The corporation plans to set up a manufacturing unit in the heritage city to turn plastic into crude oil; with the spin-offs being diesel, kerosene, wax and even a small quantity of perfume. And when this happens, Mysore will be the first city in the State to have a recycling system for plastic waste.

The project is proposed to be set up at Vidyaranyapuram on a three-acre plot and on a 30-year lease. It will be established on private-public partnership, with zero investment from the MCC.

It will use a technological process called polymer energy system. The process may offer a long-term solution to the problem of the disposal of municipal solid waste in cities.

Urban planners see it as one of the three prongs of waste-disposal method; the other two being conversion of biodegradable waste such as kitchen and vegetable waste into compost and the non-biodegradable waste used in landfills.

Segregated plastic waste will be collected from areas in sealed containers and be brought to the site for further processing. Mysore, which generates about 20-22 tonnes of plastic everyday, plans to start with processing 10 tonnes at initial stages and increase further to achieve full recycling of plastic waste everyday.

Recycling cost

The MCC will sell plastic waste to the unit and the money will be used to meet the cost of recycling in the process. The council has invited expressions of interest for the project. 

Speaking to Deccan Herald, Mysore City Corporation Commissioner K S Raykar said: “We first saw the demonstration of this technology in Chennai at the unit owned by TVS. We felt this is ideal for a city like Mysore which is witnessing unprecedented growth.”

The proposal was tabled at the last meeting of the council. Corporators received it enthusiastically, Raykar said.

Another positive aspect of the recycling project is that it will employ scores of specially abled persons in the city. Over 1,000 people have sought job opportunities at the department of welfare for physically handicapped.

The know-how

Polymer Energy System uses catalytic pyrolysis to efficiently convert plastic (primarily polyolefins) into crude oil.

The output crude oil is high-grade and can be further processed in a refinery or used to power low-rpm machines such as electric generation turbines.

This system is modular in design. A single module can produce up to 775 litres of crude oil for every tonne of typical plastic waste processed. TVS, the potential technology supplier, has set up a similar unit in Chennai.

 


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