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Solid Waste Management

BBMP men will come knocking on your door

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The New Indian Express                06.06.2013

BBMP men will come knocking on your door

BBMP is planning to have 31 zero garbage wards, which means no waste from here will go to landfills.
BBMP is planning to have 31 zero garbage wards, which means no waste from here will go to landfills.

The Bruhat Bangalore Mahanagara Palike (BBMP) authorities will conduct a  door-to-door survey to ascertain the status of waste segregation in households, from Thursday.

The BBMP, which made waste segregation at source mandatory last October, is yet to enforce it. The state Cabinet approved the proposal to include penalty clause in March 2013, and the same will be enforced after completing necessary administrative formalities. With dry waste collection centres ready at all wards by June end, the BBMP is planning to enforce it effectively.

The door-to-door survey will start at BBMP south zone which consists of 44 wards. Speaking to Express, BBMP Additional Commissioner (South) Dr K V Thrilok Chandra said the Palike is planning to have 31 zero garbage wards, which means no waste from here will go to landfills. Of the 31 wards, five are in the south zone and the project is expected to be launched soon. “Before the project starts, we want to know the ground reality of segregation at source and that is why the survey,” he said.

Explaining further, Chandra said pourakarmikas who go to houses to collect waste every day will update the BBMP health inspectors or supervisors in the wards on the nature of waste collection from each house. These officials will be given a prescribed format to feed the data. “There will be columns to write serial number, property number and address, along with phone number, segregated waste or unsegregated waste and also a column to write remarks. The officials not just feed these data, they will also randomly visit those houses to cross-check,” he said. However, this initiative will be limited to individual houses. “We will speak to members of apartment resident associations and seek their help in knowing the status of segregation at their complexes,” he added.

This initiative is expected to help the BBMP in many ways. “We will know where we need to focus. If people in certain areas are already segregating waste, there will be no need for us to inform them again. It will save our time too,” he said.

‘Waste Gets Mixed’

On the other hand, residents fear that even though they segregate waste, it will be mixed during transportation. Mukunda Rao, member, Jayanagar 5th Block Residents’ Welfare Association said, “Though this initiative gives us an idea on the status of segregation, the BBMP must ensure that segregated waste remains segregated in trucks. Waste gets mixed in many areas as both wet and dry waste is collected every day. Instead of this, they can collect dry waste once or twice a week.”

 

Palike shifts sight from landfill sites

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Deccan Herald                06.06.2013

Palike shifts sight from landfill sites

The BBMP, which had earlier identified new landfill sites to dispose of waste, has dumped the project. Instead, it is now focusing on installing new waste-processing plants across the City.

Six waste processing units to produce compressed gas

The Palike, in October 2012, had identified six new landfill sites for disposal of waste at Sunkadakatte, Challaghatta, Bagalur, Kallabalu, Yalachaguppe and Hindalawadi, following a High Court order. However, in order to reduce the use of land as dumping yards, the Palike has now decided to set up waste-processing plants at new sites.
The BBMP will set up the waste-processing plants on a public-private Partnership model at Subbarayanavala village near Tavarekere, Magadi Road, Mandur, Gundalahalli, Kudlu on Hosur Road, and Kannahalli.

“It will take at least a year to set up the plants as we need to survey the land; machines have to be bought and formalities have to be completed. Ideally, the Bangalore Development Authority (BDA) should have taken steps to identify places where waste-processing units could be installed. Since they did not show any interest, we did it,” said a BBMP official.

Noble Exchange Environment Solutions (NEX), a company working on waste management solutions, along with Bruhat Bangalore Hotel Association (BBHA), has signed a memorandum of understanding with the BBMP and procured land to set up the waste-processing units.

“We will complete setting up the waste-processing plants at Kudlu and Kannahalli, both five-acre land, in a year. Each plant will handle 250 tonnes of wet waste per day and turn it into compressed gas, which will later be supplied to hotels under BBHA in the City. We also intend to collect dry waste and recycle them,” said K S Girish Kumar, Regional Manager, NEX.

When BBMP spokesperson S S Khandre was contacted, he said the Palike was trying to avoid using landfills.

But the authorities might use the proposed landfill sites in future, if they are unable to handle the waste effectively and the City’s population grows threefold.

 

Delhi to get its second waste-to-energy plant

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The Hindu               06.06.2013

Delhi to get its second waste-to-energy plant

Staff Reporter

The second waste-to-energy plant in Delhi is now scheduled to come up at Narela in North Delhi, the North Delhi Municipal Corporation has announced.

To be built with Chinese technology, the new waste-to-energy plant would come up near the Narela-Bawana landfill site. It is expected to become ready by August-end and start functioning on a trial basis from the first week of September.

The plant, which is being constructed on a public private partnership model with the Delhi Municipal Solid Waste Solutions Limited, will dump only 10 per cent of the total waste at the sanitary landfill site.

According to the NDMC officials, the plant will generate 24 MW of electricity on daily basis after consuming 1,200 tonnes of municipal waste.

“The corporation has taken special care to check the groundwater and air pollution. We have designed the plant in such a manner that it would serve the dual purpose of adding the power generation capacity of the city, as well as containing the need of sanitary land fill sites. Besides the plant will dump only 10 per cent of the total waste and thereby won’t burden the LFS,” said a corporation official.

“The construction of the is nearing completion. We expect the trial run to start by first week of September. The plant will become fully operational by November end or December,” he added.

As per the project, only 10 per cent of the total waste will be dumped at the LFS after generation of power.

 


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