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Solid Waste Management

Segregating waste at home

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The New Indian Express         27.11.2013

Segregating waste at home

The Samriddhi Foundation, along with the civic exnora, organised an awareness programme on ‘My waste is my responsibility’ at Vivekanantha Street in North T Nagar. The street’s residents, including the children, attended the programme on waste segregation and composting.

The senior-most member in the area, M Srinivasa Rao (92) was enthusiastic about the awareness programme. “Garbage disposal is a big problem not only in India but all over the world,” he said and added that every person at home is important in waste management. “Small things put together make a big impact in society.”

N Sriram, managing trustee of the Samriddhi Foundation, talked about the method of segregating garbage to ensure that they are recycled effectively or disposed of properly. “If organic waste doesn’t mix with plastic, the value of the plastic waste goes up. Segregation at the source of waste generation is the biggest service to society,” he said.

He also informed the residents that 60 per cent of waste generated in Chennai everyday is bio waste. “The Corporation spends Rs 2,600 per ton of waste to take it to landfills. We ourselves have to find a solution for waste management. If we take the steps, the municipality is ready to invest in it,” he added.

Meenakshi Sriram from Samriddhi Foundation explained the waste management techniques that she had implemented in her apartment. She demonstrated solutions for treating organic waste at home and simple methods of composting. “We will have to initiate the practice of waste management. The children will just catch on,” she said.

The Samriddhi Foundation is working with the government to set up community compost facilities in North T Nagar to put organic wastes to better use. For more details on waste management implementation, visit www.samriddhilife.com.

 

Garbage disposal is not a ‘pipe dream’ in Puttur

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The Hindu             26.11.2013

Garbage disposal is not a ‘pipe dream’ in Puttur

Ravichandra, programme officer, Karnataka Integrated Development Society, demonstrating the working of pipe composting at Puttur in Dakshina Kannada. —Photo: H.S. Manjunath
Ravichandra, programme officer, Karnataka Integrated Development Society, demonstrating the working of pipe composting at Puttur in Dakshina Kannada. —Photo: H.S. Manjunath

Residents of Chikmudnoor village of Puttur taluk in Dakshina Kannada have opted for an innovative way to dispose of garbage. Using pipe composting, they are converting biodegradable waste into manure.

Anita is one among 400 residents in the village who have installed the system at her home. “I put waste from the kitchen into the pipe. It has been functioning smoothly so far,” she said. The success of the project has prompted the Puttur Town Municipal Council to implement it in all houses across Puttur taluk by 2014.

Introduced by the Karnataka Integrated Development Society (KIDS), the pipe composting system consists of two six-ft-long pipes, with around one-ft-long part of the pipe buried underground. Kitchen waste is put into one pipe and when it is filled, the second pipe can be used. By the time the second pipe is filled, contents of the first one would have turned into manure.

M.H. Sudhakar, chief officer, Puttur TMC, said the TMC would implement pipe composting in all 27 wards. Now, only four wards (50 houses in Kemmai, seven houses in Banglegudde, a few offices in Nellikatte and one house in Samethadka) have implemented it.

The system can be an alternative to the door-to-door collection of system in which labourers hired by the TMC collect waste from houses. Getting labourers for the job is tough as they want higher wages than what the municipality can offer.

Sahana D. C., environment engineer, TMC, Puttur, said if waste segregation was implemented properly, the municipality need to collect only dry waste on specific days.

Dayananda Poojari, vice-president of the neighbouring Nelyady Grama Panchayat, said even their panchayat was encouraging the system and 20 families had bought pipes.

Ravichandra, project officer, KIDS, said installing it was not all expensive as a 10-ft long cement pipe would cost only Rs. 350. It could be cut in to two. “Jaggery and cow dung is used to start decomposing and buttermilk will speed up the process. The manure is formed in two months and it can be sold for Rs. 40 to Rs. 50 a kg,” he said.

However, the system has its own practical difficulties too. Dajamma, another resident of Chikmudnoor found the pipes filled with water. Mr. Ravichandra, who found rice ‘ganji’ in it, said only solid waste should be dumped into it.

John Kunnithethu, executive director, KIDS, said the idea was implemented first in Thiruvananthapuram, Kerala, where the government gives a subsidy for the scheme.

 

Govt approves Rs 4.96 crore for waste management

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The Times of India      22.11.2013

Govt approves Rs 4.96 crore for waste management

MAPUSA: Solid waste management woes are likely to end soon as the government has approved close to 5 crore for the procurement of equipment for managing solid waste. The government has given administrative approval for 4.96 crore towards procurement of solid waste management equipment for all municipal councils through the Goa State Urban Development Agency (GSUDA) sources said.

In all, 1,91,000 bins of 10 litres each (green and black) and 590 bins of 20 litres each for segregated waste collection will be allotted all across the state to all municipalities.

GSUDA will also procure 41 door-to-door segregation tricycles, 14 tractor trailed two-wheeler containers, 488 plastic-injection moulded bins of 240 litres, 1,004 plastic-injection moulded bins of 240 litres covered with flat made jacket, 11 hydraulic bailing machines for municipal solid waste block-making and 11 mini-trucks of one tonne capacity.

In total 4.60 crore will be spent for the procurement of solid waste management equipment for the collection system in all municipal councils.

6.5 lakh will be spent on an awareness programme to be conducted for all councillors. 2.4 lakh will be spent on hiring vehicles for monitoring the work of implementation of segregated waste collection. Training programmes will be conducted for the waste collection staff at a cost of 3 lakh. GSUDA will carry out the e-tendering process for the job.

"There are 18,000 houses in the Mapusa municipal council (MMC) jurisdiction and all houses will get two bins for segregated waste," MMC chairperson Sandip Falari said.

"MMC will also get tricycles, tractors, trailers and two more containers," Falari told TOI.

 


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