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Solid Waste Management

MCG bans dumping of sewage

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The Times of India               28.10.2010

MCG bans dumping of sewage

GURGAON: After cracking the whip and booking people for throwing garbage in the open, the Municipal Corporation of Gurgaon (MCG) has now turned its heat on housing societies and commercial establishments which dump sewage in the open.

Municipal commissoner R K Khullar said that sewage taken out from housing societies and commercial complexes have to be transported to the sewage treatment plants.

Starting Thursday, offenders will be prosecuted.

There are many housing societies in Gurgaon whose sewage lines are not connected to the main sewage pipes in the city, and it is a very common practice among them to hire a private tanker to carry the dirty water and drain it out at a vacant plot, resulting in the outbreak of diseases like malaria and dengue. The MCG will start prosecuting people under section 188 of the Indian Penal Code.

Many industrial and commercial establishments, licensed colonies, group housing societies and the agencies hired by them dump wastes in the open. In order to stop this illegal practice, we have decided to prosecute them and make it a cognizable offence under section 188 of IPC, said municipal commissioner Rajesh Khullar.

The commissioner also held a meeting with the tanker owners on Wednesday whose tankers are used to transport the sewage. We told the tanker owners not to throw the sewage anywhere except at the two designated sewage treatment plants at Dhanwapur and Behrampur.

We are also aware that since these plants are located in the outskirts, tanker owners might ask the housing societies to pay them more for the transportation; so we have requested the RWAs to bear the hike and ensure the sewage reaches the right place.

The tankers dont need to take permission or pay a specific amount to dispose the sewage at these plants. They will be given a slip every time they dispose the sewage and the RWAs are required to take maintain a record of these slips, he said.

In order to encourage the practice of disposing off sewage in the righ place, the MCG has announced a cash reward of Rs 1100 to those who post pictures of tankers disposing sewage in the open illegally. The same reward will be given to tanker owners who report housing societies who are not willing to increase the transportation fee and insist on dumping the sewage in the open areas.

 

Finland offers cooperation in waste management

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The Hindu  27.10.2010

Finland offers cooperation in waste management

Special Correspondent

NEW DELHI: Finland on Tuesday expressed its willingness to offer new technologies to the Delhi Government in the field of waste management, improvement in sewer management and multi-utility pipe and cabling management during a meeting of its Ambassador in India Terhi Hakala and counsellor Juha Pyykko with Delhi Urban Development and Finance Minister A. K. Walia at his office in Delhi Secretariat. Both the sides have agreed to constitute a sub-group to explore the areas of mutual cooperation.

At the meeting, in which several senior officials of the Delhi Government were also present, Dr. Walia enumerated on how the city was faced with a huge problem of disposal of solid waste due to paucity of space.

The Minister said segregation of 7,000 metric tonnes of solid waste per day remains a challenge for the Government, which has also taken up a project of power generation from such waste. However, he noted that the Delhi Government has no land to develop new land fill sites and was thus keen to establish a better disposal system.

At this the Finnish Ambassador offered new technologies in waste management and generation of power from it. The Finnish officials said around 50 power-generation units in their country were run on solid waste.

Further, the Finnish Ambassador said her country has also developed a most feasible model for multi-utility pipes and cabling management. She said it has also developed a technology to clean river channels and long drains.

Last Updated on Wednesday, 27 October 2010 09:44
 

Municipality adopts solid waste mgmt in Kanpur

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Business Standard  27.10.2010

Municipality adopts solid waste mgmt in Kanpur

Kanpur Municipal Corporation has awarded the contract for collection and transportation of municipal solid waste for Kanpur city to a2z Infrastructure Limited for a period of 30 years.

This contract is an extension (backward integration) to the processing and disposal of solid waste which a2z Infrastructure is currently handling for Kanpur since May 2010.

The company will now manage the entire solid waste of the city from door-to-door collection and transportation, processing and disposal, and generating electricity from waste in an environmental friendly manner.

This is being touted as South East Asia’s largest integrated municipal solid waste management facility.

a2z Infrastructure will manage the entire city’s approximately 1,500 tonnes per day of solid waste to be collected from 850,000 households across the city’s 110 wards, which are to be covered by December 2010.

The company is also constructing a municipal solid waste management plant to power the project. Majority of the fuel used in the plant will be RDF (Refuse Derived Fuel) derived from solid waste. The plant is scheduled to be operational by March 2011 and will have the capacity to produce 15 Megawatt.

a2z Infrastructure joint MD and CEO Rajneesh Mehra said Kanpur had been ranked amongst the top 10 sanitized cities in India by union ministry of urban development in 2010.

All vehicles transporting the garbage are tracked with the help of GPS (Global Positioning System), a satellite based navigation system.

a2z Infrastructure has a portfolio of approximately 5,000 tonnes per day of municipal solid waste management in 14 cities including Patna, Meerut, Varanasi, Muzzafarnagar, Moradabad and Kanpur.

Last Updated on Wednesday, 27 October 2010 06:04
 


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