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Solid Waste Management

KITCO to begin paper work for new waste treatment plant

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The Hindu              06.12.2013

KITCO to begin paper work for new waste treatment plant

Garbage dumped near Ayyanadu bridge,near Kakkanad.— Photo: Thulasi Kakkat
Garbage dumped near Ayyanadu bridge,near Kakkanad.— Photo: Thulasi Kakkat

The groundwork for the proposed solid waste treatment plant at Brahmapuram has just started with KITCO, the public sector consultant, being selected for initiating the job.

The Local Self Government Department and KITCO will sign an agreement shortly authorising the latter to prepare the bid documents. It will also be responsible for selecting the agency which should implement the project. The bid documents would be ready within one month of the consultant being assigned the task, officials said.

Earlier, the State government had announced that it would set up a modern waste treatment plant at Brahmapuram in place of the existing one. The existing plant, which the Kochi Corporation had established with the funds allotted from the Jawaharlal Nehru National Urban Renewal Mission, had developed technical snags and the floor of the plant had developed cracks. Some portions of the floor even sank and the plant had to be shut down for some time. Later, the local body roped in a private agency for repairing and running the plant.

The new plant, with an installed capacity to process at least 300 tonnes of refuse a day, will cater to the needs of the Kochi Corporation and the adjoining municipalities. The paper works related to the bidding process for the new plant would be completed by March and it would take another one-and-a-half years for building the new plant. KITCO will also be responsible for overseeing the execution of the work and also the operations, officials said.

At the same time, V.P. Sajeendran, MLA, the legislator representing the Brahmapuram area, said the government had promised to complete the plant before March.

The delay in completing the process had been repeatedly brought to the attention of the authorities including the Minister concerned. The Minister had also offered to convene a meeting of the stakeholder agencies to discuss the issue, Mr. Sajeendran said.

Plant in participatory mode

The government plans to set up the plant in the Private-Public-Participation mode, and the government’s share would be the land on which the plant has to be constructed. The firm selected for the job will have to pay rent for the land. The profit of the company, which is willing to invest in the project, would come through the sale of electricity to be generated from the waste. Going by the early understanding, the Kerala State Electricity Board will buy power from it. The details of the power purchase agreement would be worked out later, he said.

At the same time, it is not clear whether the local bodies will have to pay user fees for processing the waste generated by them at the new plant. Currently, the Kochi Corporation is levying a fee from the neighbouring local bodies for treating the refuse, he said.

 

RMC, A2Z part ways amicably

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The Pioneer           05.12.2013 

RMC, A2Z part ways amicably

There could not have been a better end to months of slugfest between the Ranchi Municipal Corporation (RMC) and A2Z, the solid waste management firm, over the pathetic waste management system in the capital.

Contrary to the posturing by the RMC, the parting formula was worked out in advance between the municipal body and the A2Z, thus ruling out legal recourse in the matter by either party.

“It (terminating the 2010 agreement meant for 30 years) was amicably decided; hence we are not moving court on the matter. Moving out of this loss making venture is profitable for us,” maintained National Head (Operations & HR) of A2Z, VP Pandey.

As per the formula mutually agreed between the RMC and the A2Z, the latter will hand over all resources currently used for garbage collecting to the municipal body while keeping the waste treatment plant with itself. The carrying and transportation of wastes will be the responsibility of the newly empanelled agencies — Manthan, Chaal Foundation, Nav Bharat Jagriti Kendra, Gramin Mahila Yuva Vikas Samiti, Clean Jharkhand, Purnima Enterprises, Heritage Society and Creative International.

“We have asked them to disassociate themselves of the carrying and transportation part of the waste management and handover the resources within 30 days,” said RMC PRO, Naresh Kumar Sinha.

Incidentally, construction at the waste management plant is in last phase and is likely to become operational after three to four months. The plant is being constructed at Jhiri in Ratu.

“We are waiting for the next installment of grant to be released. As soon as it is released we will expedite the work to make it operational from next year,” added Pandey.

After rephrasing the terms of agreement the waste management firm will handover around 15 compactors, 10 dumpers, 55 Tata Ace vehicles besides 1350 rickshaws to the municipal body.

The resources thus collected are likely to be distributed among the eight freshly empanelled agencies for waste management in the city.

Even as the RMC and A2Z decided to revisit their contract, the municipal body is yet to frame rules governing method of operations for the eight Non-Governmental Organizations (NGOs) selected through a tender process. Ironically, the agencies selected have not quoted rates for collecting garbage.

“It will take another seven days to finalise terms & conditions for them. We will try to evolve a model for work distribution among the agencies selected (before A2Z disassociates itself from garbage collection),” pointed out Sinha.

Notably, the NGOs have been asked to submit their quotes till December 30.

The agreement between the agencies and the municipal body will be for three months initially. According to sources, the NGOs will continue with the prevailing method of operation which includes door-to-door collection of waste which is dumped at nearest metallic bin finally transporting it to Jhiri.

 

22 international firms keen to manage, treat city’s garbage

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The Indian Express            04.12.2013

22 international firms keen to manage, treat city’s garbage

Twenty-two foreign firms have responded to an expression of interest (EoI) issued by the Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation's solid waste management (SWM) department for developing waste-to-energy and waste-processing technologies from the city's refuse.

The EoI received 31 responses, 19 of which are joint ventures and consortia proposals and 12 are single firm proposals. Companies from Israel, Holland, Switzerland, Germany, the US, China, South Korea, Japan and the UAE participated in the EoI.

The initiative is part of the corporation's attempt to ease pressure off the city's landfills at Deonar and Mulund, which have exceeded capacity as the appointed contractors have resisted processing garbage due to problems in land-lease agreement. The proposed waste processing plants will be set up at Mumbai's various transfer stations. The city generates nearly 6,500 metric tonnes of municipal solid waste and 2,000-2,500 metric tonnes of construction waste (debris and silt) daily. A provision of Rs 100.8 crores has been made in the civic budget for this project this year; additionally some components will be funded under the Jawaharlal Nehru National Urban Renewal Mission (JNNURM).

The civic body will now approach the Union finance ministry for appointing one of its empanelled transaction advisors to select eligible bids before issuing the request for proposal (RFP) for setting up the waste-processing technology on a public-private-partnership basis. "After we select these, the proposal will have to obtain environmental clearances and other permissions from the Centre. We expect to issue the RFP within three months," said Deputy Municipal Commissioner Prakash Patil.

As per the revised plan, the corporation will share the capital expenditure for setting up the plant with the company. "In our previous experience, we found that our revenue expenditure was going up considerably. We have now decided to share the capital costs," Additional Municipal Commissioner Mohan Adtani had said.

Among the international companies that have participated in the bidding process are Oil Spill Eater International, Corp (USA), which has been employed by the US Navy, Air Force and Marines, Averda International (UAE), Hitachi Zosen Innova AG (Japan), MARTIN Gmbh (Germany) and Jiangxi Jianglian International Engineering Co Ltd (China).

Three firms each from Germany, Malaysia and China have shown interest. They have entered in joint ventures and consortia with Indian companies. Two firms each from Switzerland, Singapore, and the UAE have responded to the EOI. The Jindal group, whose waste-processing technology the BMC has evinced interest in acquiring, has also participated in the EOI as Jindal ITF in a consortium with the Indian firm Hubtown and Innovative Eco-Care Pvt Ltd from Gujarat.

The current contractors UPL Environmental Engineers, who are managing the two landfills, have also participated with German firm MDSE MDH. Ramky Enviro Engineers Ltd, which was in the news for ineffective garbage collection in K-West and K-East wards, has also participated in the bid.

 


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