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Solid Waste Management

Zoo finds a way to manage waste

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The Hindu              23.12.2013

Zoo finds a way to manage waste

The Zoo and Museum Department is on track to become self-sufficient in managing biodegradable waste. The department had considered options such as a modern magnetic field-based machine, but finally settled for the tried and tested technology of vermicompost.

The unit is built next to the rhinoceros enclosure. A portion of the three large rectangular pits have been filled with dung, dried leaves, and food waste and is expected to yield manure in 90 days. “Only after one cycle is completed can the exact amount of manure produced be precisely calculated. In time, close to one tonne of high-quality manure can be produced a week from this units,” Zoo Director B. Joseph said.

Since the Vilappilsala waste treatment plant was closed two years ago, the Zoo and Museum Department had to rely on a third party to cart away waste in bulk daily. Considering the footfall and the waste left from feeding the animals and cleaning enclosures, it turned out to be a huge burden on the department’s coffers.

Officials from the Kerala Agricultural University visited the zoo and extended support to the latest venture. Currently, four keepers have been entrusted with the responsibility of managing the unit.

Mr. Joseph said the manure generated would be sold to farmers and other groups in the city engaged in cultivation. “We have not yet set a price. We propose to set aside the revenue from the fertilizer sale for zoo employees who are managing the unit,” said Mr. Joseph.

Keeping FMD at bay

The cloven-hoofed creatures in the city zoo are still facing the threat of foot-and-mouth disease. Since the Animal Husbandry Department had issued timely alerts, the department could take precautions such as placing foot and tyre dips near the entrances and administering the Raksha-Ovac vaccine on larger animals such as the nilgai and gaurs earlier this year.

They have now cordoned off the section of the zoo accommodating species susceptible to the deadly disease. Visitors have to take another route that leads straight to the big cats’ section from the elephant and rhino enclosure, bypassing the cloven-hoofed.

 

‘More waste can be processed at Terra Firma’

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The Hindu              23.12.2013

‘More waste can be processed at Terra Firma’

Staff Reporter

High Court judge N. Kumar said here on Sunday that more quantum of waste generated in the city can be sent to the waste processing facility at Terra Firma plant in Doddaballapur as it is spread across 100 acres and there is no human inhabitation close by.

Director of Terra Firma Biotechnologies Ltd. R. Dayananda said that the plant could process 1,000 tonnes of garbage a day and is currently running on just around 50 per cent of its capacity. The BBMP sends an average of 450 tonnes of solid waste to the unit.

BBMP Commissioner M. Lakshminarayana said that they would try to increase the quantum of waste sent to Terra Firma.

Managing Director of Terra Firma Biotechnologies Ltd. R. Ganesh said that waste, including plastics, is being processed using over 20 machines at the plant.

One tonne of processed plastic is sold at Rs. 18,000. The leachate accumulated at the plant is stored in three tanks and would used to generate electricity.

 

Set up waste processing units in all Assembly segments: judge

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The Hindu              23.12.2013

Set up waste processing units in all Assembly segments: judge

High Court judges N. Kumar and B.V. Nagaratna at a solid waste processing unit at Koligere, near Doddaballapur, on Sunday.— Photo: G.P. Sampath Kumar
High Court judges N. Kumar and B.V. Nagaratna at a solid waste processing unit at Koligere, near Doddaballapur, on Sunday.— Photo: G.P. Sampath Kumar

Karnataka High Court judge N. Kumar said that the Bruhat Bangalore Mahanagara Palike (BBMP) would be directed to set up garbage processing units in all the 28 Assembly constituencies.

He was speaking to presspersons here on Sunday after inspecting the waste segregation units in Kuvempunagar ward, Mavallipura landfill and the Terra Firma waste processing plant at Koligere in Doddaballapur.

Mr. Kumar was accompanied by High Court judge B.V. Nagarathna and BBMP Commissioner M. Lakshminarayana besides officials concerned.

The visit was in connection with a case they are hearing in the High Court about solid waste management in the city. The inspection was aimed at taking stock of the measures that the Bruhat Bangalore Mahanagara Palike has taken to ensure that garbage collection and its management in the city is done in a systematic manner. In fact, the judges had visited dry waste collection units in the city a few months ago.

Mr. Kumar told presspersons that it would be better if garbage processing units are set up in each of the 28 Assembly constituencies in the city.

Underlining the need to segregate waste at source, he said that citizens should cooperate with the civic authorities and ensure that they segregate dry and wet waste before handing it over to the pourakarmikas who come to collect it.

“If the contractors do not supervise the segregation process as required, their contract licence will be cancelled. The citizens must also cooperate and segregate the waste at source,” he said.

According to him, 80 per cent of the waste generated in the city can be processed and used for production of gas and electricity, and the remaining solid waste could be used to make asphalt.

When the inspecting team members reached Mavallipura Dinne, residents shared their woes with them. Residents told them that as waste is dumped there, all water sources have been polluted forcing them to buy drinking water paying Rs. 30 for 20-litre can. Dumping of waste in Mavallipura has posed serious health hazards to locals and animals, they said adding that the judges should direct the BBMP to clear accumulated waste in Mavallipura Dinne on priority.

Residents of Vidyaranyapura and Yelahanka, who were at the Kuvempunagar segregation unit, blamed the contractors for improper segregation of waste. They attributed this to lack of manpower and equipment. “Ever since the new contractor took over in December last year, manpower of over 100 workers has come down to 53,” said R. Premchand, president of Kalathur Layout Residents’ Welfare Association.

Mr. Lakshminarayana said that they would implement the recommendations made by the judges with regard to solid waste management in the city. He said processing units would be set up soon and pointed out that these units would not only help the BBMP cut down on costs but would also address the garbage issue at the local level.

 


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