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Solid Waste Management

‘Educate public on garbage segregation’

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The Hindu                    03.04.2013

‘Educate public on garbage segregation’

Expressing dissatisfaction over the measures to educate Bangaloreans on the need of segregation of waste (dry and wet) at source, the Karnataka High Court on Tuesday asked the authorities to initiate effective steps to bring awareness among citizens.

A Division Bench comprising Justice N. Kumar and Justice B.V. Nagarathna issued the direction while hearing PIL petitions about Bangalore’s garbage problems.

Pointing out that it is not possible to ensure segregation of garbage through court orders, the Bench said only public awareness about civic responsibilities would lead to segregation at source.

The State government, the Karnataka State Pollution Control Board and the Bruhat Bangalore Mahanagara Palike (BBMP) should work towards this.

Emphasising the need to put in place waste processing units instead of creating more landfills, the Bench asked the BBMP to submit a report indicating the details of the projects approved to process waste and the stages of their implementation.

Meanwhile, BBMP Commissioner H. Siddaiah told the court that dry waste collection centres would be ready in all the 198 wards by the end of this month and this would bring down the quantum of garbage in landfills. Non-governmental agencies would be given six months to manage these dry waste centres on an experimental basis.

Mr. Siddaiah said the BBMP would link solid waste management with trade licences in future.

 

Garbage transporters sneakily leave behind big clumps: study

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The Hindu                    03.04.2013

Garbage transporters sneakily leave behind big clumps: study

 

When the public sees garbage heaps, it doesn’t think twice about adding waste.

A considerable quantity of garbage collected from locality mushrooms in the same area instead of being transported to the designated landfills, reveals a report of a pilot project carried out by a private data solutions company to assist the Bruhat Bangalore Mahanagara Palike (BBMP) in addressing issues related to garbage at the Konena Agrahara ward.

The project outcome was submitted to a Division Bench of the Karnataka High Court comprising Justice N. Kumar and Justice B.V. Nagarathna on Tuesday during the hearing of public interest litigation (PIL) petitions on Bangalore’s garbage problems.

Navigem Data Pvt. Ltd., which did the pilot project free of cost for the BBMP as part of the company’s corporate social responsibility (CSR) after the BBMP accepted its proposal to carry out the study, pointed out in its report that garbage ‘mushrooms’ are coming up near electrical transformers and vacant sites, where the transporters are unofficially dumping portions of the garbage they are supposed to lift.

In Konena Agrahara, the report pointed out, the approximate accumulation of garbage in the form of mushrooms could be around 500 metric tonnes and these could be lying there for months or years. The report has identified at least 52 mushrooms in Konena Agrahara lying there for months and even years. The report points out that it is a huge quantum of garbage accumulation compared to daily collection of around 16 to 19 tonnes per day in the ward.

When contacted, Madhu Kongovi, chief executive officer, Navigem, told The Hindu the mushrooms have cropped up as the transporters are trying to “sweep the garbage under the carpet”, while trying to keep the official pickup and satellite points clean.

This, he said, was because they are not equipped to transport entire the quantity of collected garbage to landfills in one go.

“What we observed was that people don’t start dumping trash in vacant sites by themselves. But when they see an existing waste pileup they don’t think twice about adding to it. This is how garbage mushrooms are born. With time, these mushrooms get only bigger,” he pointed out.

Waste segregation

Mr. Kongovi, however, said that mushrooming should end once the segregation at source and waste collection from bulk generators are streamlined as it reduces nearly 50 per cent of the total garbage to be transported to landfills.

“Seventy per cent of mushrooms are on vacant sites and around transformers,” the report pointed out.

He said that a team of eight persons kept a close watch on garbage, generation, collection and transportation for about eight weeks, collected necessary data and analysed them using mathematical and statistical data analysis tools.

The report also disclosed that only 10 per cent of the ward segregates the waste and door-to-door collection is only to the extent of 58 per cent.

Suggested solutions

In its recommendations, the report stated that hoardings and posters, debris and dig-ups created by BWSSB and Bescom, debris of trees pruned by Bescom and dumping of illegal construction materials had to be regulated. It also recommended working of garbage collectors and cleaners in two shifts — 6.30 a.m. to 1 p.m., and 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. instead of the present 6.30 a.m. to 2.30 p.m.

 

MC seeks to learn from Lahore waste management

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The Indian Express                    03.04.2013 

MC seeks to learn from Lahore waste management

The Ludhiana Municipal Corporation is trying to learn new ways to improve its solid waste management system from neighbouring Pakistan whose three-member team is visiting the city.

The team is led by senior administrative officer Wasim Azmal Chaudhary from Lahore Waste Management Company. A few days back, LMC commissioner R K Verma had visited Lahore for the same purpose and studied Lahore's waste management system, which is considered to be the best in Asia.

Talking to Ludhiana Newsline, A S Sekhon, incharge of health and sanitation wing and joint commissioner, who held discussions with the Pakistani delegation, said, "Both the tours were a kind of experience-sharing platforms for India and Pakistan. We discussed various aspects of solid waste management."

On the highly efficient Lahore solid waste management system, he said, "After our study, we have established that Lahore has excellently implemented the mechanical sweeping system of washing the roads and use of sprinklers. We are discussing the ways to improve the system here too."

The Pakistani team is in Punjab on an invitation by the Punjab government. Deputy Chief Minister Sukhbir Singh Badal on Tuesday invited the team to Jalalabad, and they would be going to other cities of Punjab like Jalandhar and Amritsar in the coming days during their tour till April 4.

Last Updated on Thursday, 04 April 2013 08:58
 


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