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Solid Waste Management

PMC to set aside Rs 4 crore for garbage collection

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The New Indian Express  11.12.2010

PMC to set aside Rs 4 crore for garbage collection

PUNE: The Pune Municipal Corporation (PMC) has decided to push the door-to-door collection of garbage and has proposed setting aside Rs 4 crore from its coffers for the purpose.

Municipal commissioner Mahesh Zagade, in a proposal to the standing committee, has stated that SWaCH, a ragpickers' organisation, has been collecting garbage from thousands of homes. A memorandum of understanding has been signed between the organisation and the civic body.

The MoU states that all households should be covered by the ragpickers. "As of now, SWaCH members cover about 35-40 per cent households in the city. Every household pays them Rs 10 per month. Generally, two waste collectors cover 250-350 households and they get paid around Rs 2,500-Rs 3,500. Many wastepickers give up as the returns are meagre. If the PMC provides assistance of Rs 5 per waste collector, they will get around Rs 4,000-Rs 5,250 per month," the proposal said.

No amount is charged from slum dwellers and hence the civic body should pay them Rs 5 per slum tenement per month, the proposal added.

"It is necessary that garbage collection by SWaCH achieves its target. The assistance of Rs 5 per household will put the burden of approximately Rs 4 crore on the civic body every year. It will help the PMC achieve 100 per cent garbage segregation," the proposal said.

The civic body has told citizens that garbage will not be cleared or their water connection will be cut off if segregation does not happen. Most societies have not complied with the civic orders.

Clearing garbage

SWaCH is authorised to provide door-to-door waste collection and other allied waste management services by the PMC. It includes collection, resource recovery, trade and waste processing. SWaCH services 2 lakh homes across the city.

DPs must fix places for processing plants'

The state assembly on Friday debated the city's garbage issue. Minister of state for urban development Bhaskar Jadhav said that the state government has decided that locations for garbage processing plants have to be identified in any new or revised development plan.

The discussion started on a calling attention motion when MLAs from Thane complained that the garbage issue was not handled efficiently by the local authorities. Pune's MLAs joined the debate and said that the Pune Municipal Corporation was facing problems in finding locations for processing plants.

All efforts by the Pune Municipal Corporation (PMC) and the district collector to acquire land in the villages around Pune to set up garbage processing plants have failed. Villagers are not ready to give their land and there was no option but to set up processing units within the city's limits and citizens will have to cooperate, they said.

The PMC has already announced that the new DP for the city will have reservations across the city to set up garbage processing units. As of now, the city generates about 1,300-1,400 tonne garbage daily. About 1,000 tonne garbage is processed at Hanjer biotech company plant at Urali Devachi, while the rest is treated thorough biogas, mechanical compost and vermi-compost units in the city.

Last Updated on Saturday, 11 December 2010 11:21
 

Mysore to adopt zero waste management system

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The Hindu  11.12.2010

Mysore to adopt zero waste management system

Special Correspondent


26 self-help groups have been trained

390 tonnes of garbage is generated every day

in Mysore city


MYSORE: The Mysore City Corporation will introduce zero waste management in 12 wards in January 2011 in a bid to reduce pollution and to recycle the waste.

Corporation Commissioner K.S. Raykar, recently addressed a workshop on “Decentralised Basic Needs Service” organised by the corporation, the Rural Literacy and Health Programme, and the Consortium for Decentralised Waste Water Treatment Systems Dissemination. He said that at present zero waste management was being implemented in one ward but this will be extended to 12 wards for which training has been imparted to more than 300 persons and 26 self-help groups. The workshop was inaugurated by Deputy Mayor Pushpalatha Jagannath. The workshop was held in the backdrop of rapid urbanisation of Mysore and the imperative of decentralised basic needs service, as the city, with a population of 1.2 million, generated 390 tonnes of garbage daily.

At present, out of the 390 tonnes of garbage, only 200 tonnes is handled by the sewage treatment plant in the city which works intermittently. G. William of Rural Literacy and Health Programme delivered the keynote address. He presented a macro picture of the problem of waste generated in urban areas. He said that a study of 107 samples from borewells of Mysore city revealed that 51 samples or 47.66 p.c. of the samples were contaminated and contained nitrates greater than the permissible level. This is harmful, he added.

Last Updated on Saturday, 11 December 2010 07:30
 

Unplanned solid waste management

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The New Indian Express  08.12.2010

Unplanned solid waste management

KOCHI: A developing city like Kochi still does not have a proper waste management system. Though a master plan is supposed to suggest concrete measures to tackle the garbage menace, the Kochi master plan hardly addresses this grave issue. The only portion that mention about the issue in the plan reads - “The urban environment in Kochi is deteriorating at a fast rate. A few issues like solid waste collection and disposal, sewage disposal, storm/surface water drainage, lack of public toilets etc have been identified and actions are being initiated to mitigate these problems.”  

To find a solution, CREDAI had come up with a plan in 2007 to process solid waste. The eco-friendly waste management technique uses the aerobic microbial composting system for solid waste management. “It’s a kind of decentralised waste management. As of now the system has been implemented in 15,000 houses in and around the city and the feedback so far is very good,” says Kabeer V Haroon, project manger, CREDAI Clean City Movement.  

The project was first implemented in highrises using biogas wings. “Every day, nearly one-and-a-half kg of waste is produced in every house. We collect organic waste and plastic waste in two separate buckets. The organic waste is later deposited in biobins and later a solution of micro organism is sprinkled onto it. Aerobic microbial composting system decomposes waste within 15 to 20 days, converting it into an excellent organic fertiliser,” he said. While organic waste is processed to create organic fertiliser, plastic waste is taken to the shredding unit at Ravipuram. Though the project was implemented only in apartments in the initial stage, 500 villas are now part of it. Another benefit of the plan is that it turns waste collectors into waste processors. “The people who come to collect waste take it directly to the biogas wing to process it,” said Kabeer.  Although a number of apartment complexes are part of the Clean City Movement there is still no comprehensive programme that covers the whole city.

Last Updated on Wednesday, 08 December 2010 09:29
 


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