Urban News

  • Increase font size
  • Default font size
  • Decrease font size
Solid Waste Management

Panel to visit Kodungallur municipality

Print PDF

The Hindu             19.07.2013

Panel to visit Kodungallur municipality

Staff Reporter

The monitoring committee constituted to resolve the issue of waste management in Kottayam will visit the Kodungallur municipality on July 27. The visit is intended to assess the arrangements in place for waste processing and to decide whether the system could be replicated in the Kottayam municipality. The District Collector is heading the committee.

The committee is also mulling over dropping the proposal of capping the waste at the Vadavathoor dumping yard. The inability of the municipality in finding establishments to carry out the process is said to be the reason behind the move.

Plea to government

The municipality will invite tenders once again before making a final decision on scrapping the project. It will also request the State government to permit the usage of the financial assistance, originally intended for capping, for implementing its source-level waste disposal scheme.  

The monitoring committee will study the arrangements in place for waste management in the municipality.

 

Udupi to use green tech to process garbage

Print PDF

The Hindu             19.07.2013

Udupi to use green tech to process garbage

Special Correspondent

Proposes to set up a vermicompost unit and a biomethanation plant

Udupi City Municipal Council (CMC) is laying emphasis on green technology to process the garbage generated in the city.

The CMC is planning to install a vermicompost plant and a biomethanation plant to process biodegradable waste. The vermicompost plant will have a capacity to process four tonnes per day, and the capacity of the biomethanation plant will be two tonnes per day.

Udupi city generates around 58 tonnes of garbage per day. Presently this garbage is being processed at the Solid Waste Management Plant located on 22 acres of land in Alevoor village near the city. The CMC would be taking up a pilot project of waste segregation at source in 3,000 houses in a monthThe vermicompost plant will be set up on 10 cents of land at the Alevoor Solid Waste Management Plant. According to CMC Environment Engineer M.K. Subrahmanya, the vermicompost plant will have two sheds – one with 24 pits and the other with 21 pits. Four tonnes of biodegradable waste would be put in a pit every day. “Farmers and people with gardens could use this vermicompost. We expect to make Rs. 48,000 per day by selling the vermicompost,” he said.

The vermicompost plant is estimated to cost Rs. 29 lakh and is expected to come up in six months. A minimum of two labourers would be required to look after the plant.

Biomethanation

The biomethanation plant will be established on five cents of land at Beedinagudde here and is estimated to cost Rs. 33 lakh.

Here two tonnes of biodegradable waste would be converted into slurry, which would then be fed into the digester of the biomethanation plant. Mr. Subrahmanya said the waste would decompose in two days and start emitting methane. This methane would be passed into a generator, which will produce 15 KV of power per day. A separate power line will be drawn from this generator and the power generated would be used to light 100 street lamps. In addition, the compost generated from his plant could also be sold.

Here the CMC expects to make Rs. 2 lakh per year by selling the compost and also save on electricity bill. “We are yet to get technical sanction from the State government for this plant. It may take a minimum of one year for this plant to come up,” Mr. Subrahmanya said.

“Besides utilising waste in an eco-friendly manner, we want to use green technology to promote a clean environment,” said CMC Commissioner Gokuldas Nayak.

 

Segregated garbage collection in Zone IV

Print PDF

The Hindu              18.07.2013

Segregated garbage collection in Zone IV

District Collector V Sheshadri flanked by GVMC Commissioner M V Satyanarayana and Lt Commander Parihar along with Vice Chairman VUDA N Yuvaraj and Additional Commissioner GVMC Janaki displaying the logo of the Solid Waste Management programme at a function organised to launch SWM in ward 49 of Zone IV in Visakhapatnam on Wednesday. (Right) Schoolchildren being herded in a garbage tipper of the GVMC to the programme---- photos: C.V. SUBRAHMANYAM

District Collector V Sheshadri flanked by GVMC Commissioner M V Satyanarayana and Lt Commander Parihar along with Vice Chairman VUDA N Yuvaraj and Additional Commissioner GVMC Janaki displaying the logo of the Solid Waste Management programme at a function organised to launch SWM in ward 49 of Zone IV in Visakhapatnam on Wednesday. (Right) Schoolchildren being herded in a garbage tipper of the GVMC to the programme---- photos: C.V. SUBRAHMANYAM

The long awaited solid waste management system of the Greater Visakhapatnam Municipal Corporation is set to begin from July 24 in the wards of Zone IV. District Collector V Sheshadri flagged off the campaign for beginning of the much delayed programme.

The campaign vehicles and door-to-door campaign is being taken up to educate the residents of the need for segregating domestic solid waste into dry and wet and dispose them separately.

Mixing of non-biodegradable waste with the other waste was causing irreparable damage to environment, the Collector said underscoring the importance of disposing the two separately. He called upon the residents of the city to own up the responsibility for segregation and also spread awareness on it.

Pointing out that the city was often called the ‘Brightest Jewel on the Coromandel Coast’ he urged the citizens to help keep the city clean and improve its image in the world. He commended the officials of the civic body for gearing up to face the challenge.

The Zone IV has a population of 4 to 4.5 lakh which is equal to the population of Warangal city, Commissioner GVMC M V Satyanarayana said explaining why solid waste management was such a mammoth challenge for the civic body.

The logistics involved in spreading awareness apart from collecting and disposing the garbage in different locations was huge, and this was one of the main reasons for the inordinate delay in grounding of the project.

As part of the campaign, the GVMC is urging the residents to recycle the non-biodegradable wastes and suggesting that only segregated waste is disposed of in separate bins that are being provided by the civic body. This way the solid waste that is sent to the landfill could be brought down, he explained.

As part of the planning 285 route maps have been drawn up covering the entire Zone IV, pushcarts carrying separate bins for dry and wet wastes have been made ready, he added. Vice-Chairman Visakhapatnam Urban Development Authority N Yuvaraj, Additional Commissioner GVMC M. Janaki, a large number of officials, representatives of resident welfare associations and residents participated.

The GVMC is organising a contest among residents on the segregation.

A card would be given to the households and the ones who unfailingly segregate their garbage everyday before handing it over to the garbage collectors are to get prizes.

 


Page 80 of 265