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Solid Waste Management

Smaller waste plants instead of a single big one: MCG chief

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The Times of India                09.01.2014 

Smaller waste plants instead of a single big one: MCG chief

GURGAON: Municipal commissioner Praveen Kumar wants smaller recycling plants in different parts of the city instead of a single construction and demolition waste processing unit. Kumar made the decision after a recent meeting with the officials of the Municipal Corporation of Delhi.

The MCD officials, Kumar said, suggested a single recycling plant will not be financially viable as the cost incurred in transporting waste from various parts of the city to the plant will be huge. They suggested it would be better to have smaller plants in different pockets of the city.

"I held a meeting with senior MCD officials a few days ago and asked them if the plant being operated by them is financially viable. They told me that they are not able to make much profit as transporting the waste to the plant alone is proving to be a costly affair. They also suggested me not to go in for one huge plant and instead set up smaller plants across the city," said Kumar.

"We will have to look for places where these smaller plants can be set up," he added.

Meanwhile, the next date of hearing in the case filed by a Gurgaon resident against MCG, HUDA and DTCP in the National Green Tribunal is on Thursday. The resident, Priya VK Singh had approached the NGT last year asking the tribunal to direct all the three government agencies to set up C&D waste plants in their area. In the last hearing in December, the agencies failed to inform the tribunal the steps taken by them to contain the mess created by frequent dumping of waste across the city.

 

Private agency steps in to manage Sarvodayapuram solid waste treatment plant

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The Times of India             06.01.2014

Private agency steps in to manage Sarvodayapuram solid waste treatment plant

ALAPPUZHA: The Alappuzha municipality has decided to entrust the operation of its defunct Sarvodayapuram solid waste treatment plant to a private agency this week. The plant is expected to primarily manage waste from Alappuzha town.

The agency will charge Rs 4 per kg of waste to be disposed from commercial establishments, and will not collect waste from households, initially.

The municipality set up the treatment plant in 2010 at Sarvodayapuram in Mararikkulam with the help of Andhra Pradesh Technology Development Corporation (APTDC). However, the plant has not functioned well since its inauguration, and the municipality ended up dumping waste in the plant. However, the civic body had to stop dumping after local residents of Sarvodayapuram blocked its trucks on December 17.

The new agency has promised to convert waste into manure and also produce feed for fish and pigs. The plastic waste will be sold to recycling units.

Municipal chairperson Mercy Diana Masido said they had prepared an agreement for the purpose. It will soon be inked by the civic body and the private agency.

""We will hold a meeting in two days to finalize the agreement. After that, the private agency can use the plant for waste management. Hotels, abattoirs and shops will be charged a small fee for waste disposal. The municipality will provide its vehicles to the agency for a fee to shift waste from town," said Masido.

Malinya Nirmarjana Samithy member C S Sethunath said they would only approve municipality's move after the agency proves that it can manage and treat waste from the plant effectively. "We will not attend any meeting and listen to the words of the municipality as we have been cheated by them. They should act first," he said.

 

BMC, CRISIL join hands for ‘enhanced’ civic services

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The Indian Express              06.01.2014

BMC, CRISIL join hands for ‘enhanced’ civic services

The BMC's solid waste management (SWM) department has tied up with global analytical company CRISIL to create mechanisms with which the corporation can enhance civic services in accordance with the standards set by the Ministry of Urban Development, Government of India.

In 2008, the ministry had introduced Service-Level Benchmarks (SLBs) for some basic municipal services — water supply, sewerage, solid waste management and storm water drainage. These benchmarks were set in order to "facilitate critical reforms in the urban sector".

With CRISIL, the BMC will analyse the status of these basic services and come up with time-bound solutions to solve any problems it finds.

The All India Institute of Local Self-Government was appointed last year to carry out a study on the issue.

The BMC has declared that for the next two financial years, it will work to achieve the SLBs of 100 per cent house-to-house collection and waste segregation. The corporation says that it has already achieved 70 per cent of its target for house-to-house collection.

"We have achieved considerable success in house-to-house collection, even in slum areas, through the Swachcha Mumbai Prabodhan Abhiyan programme and are currently working on real-time monitoring," said deputy municipal commissioner Prakash Patil.

He added that the BMC is working on removing the human element in the monitoring of all services. Instead of assigning officers to inspect the work, it will be monitored from the offices through live feeds.

Other SLBs for the SWM sector prescribed by the ministry include 100 per cent efficiency in garbage collection, 100 per cent collection of solid waste, 80 per cent recovery of collected waste through recycling, 100 per cent scientific disposal of municipal solid waste, 100 per cent extent of cost recovery in SWM services and 90 per cent efficiency in collection of SWM charges.

 


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