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Solid Waste Management

Dirt wave

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Indian Express   26.07.2010

Dirt wave

sharvaripatwa Tags : garbage, waste Posted: Mon Jul 26 2010, 01:17 hrs

Garbage

A fish seller amid the garbage at Marve beach
Pune:  The beaches in the island city may be the favourite hangout spots for Mumbaiites but one cannot expect clean waves lashing the shore or children playing with sand castles anymore. All that adorn the shores today are piles of garbage, dirty plastic bags and even carcasses. “There is a lot of garbage on beaches including plastic waste dumped by visitors and even those who live nearby,” said B P Patil, chief engineer, Solid Waste Management (SWM). “In monsoon, the high tide brings garbage from low lying areas on the sea coast,” says Neville David of Juhu Beach Life Guard Association.

“Trucks come and collect the garbage from beaches everyday but even then it is impossible to keep them clean especially in monsoon,” says R S Mashelkar, senior life guard at Aksa beach. Sneha, a volunteer who participates in cleaning drives, says, “In monsoon, beach cleaning drives can truly be successful only if there is better management of waste throughout the city.”

“On an average a total of 20-25 tonne of garbage is collected from the city’s beaches which include Girgaum, Dadar, Mahim, Juhu, Aksa, and Gorai,” says Patil. “In monsoon, the garbage collected from here increases to at least 90 metric tonnes per day,” he adds.

In total, Mumbai generates almost 6,000 tonnes of waste, of which at least 5% is plastic, and most of it flows towards the seas during monsoon, according to SWM officials. According to a senior official, many pockets of the city do not have a proper solid waste disposal mechanism until now. In those cases, people throw garbage near their houses and if not taken to dumping grounds, it will most likely end up flowing towards seas during a high tide pressure, he added. These beaches turn even dirtier during Ganesh Chaturthi as most idols, and other waste including flowers and thermocol material, are immersed in the sea.

A five-year contract was awarded to private contractors in 2006 to maintain cleanliness at beaches in Dadar, Mahim, Versova, and Juhu, said Patil. The contract for Gorai and Aksa beaches has been given only last year, he said.
Last Updated on Monday, 26 July 2010 11:08
 

E-waste recyclers urged to work in clusters

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The Hindu       23.07.2010

E-waste recyclers urged to work in clusters

Staff Reporter


The unit dismantles, refurbishes, reuses, recycles e-waste

It can handle 350 tonnes of e-waste a month



Waste gobbler:Adviser to the Chief Minister A. Ravindra and Chairman of the Karnataka State Pollution Control Board A.S. Sadashivaiah at the inauguration of the Eco Birdd e-waste recycling unit in Bangalore on Thursday.

BANGALORE: Karnataka State Pollution Control Board (KSPCB) Chairman A.S. Sadashivaiah on Thursday urged e-waste recyclers in the informal sector to take the cooperative union path for better recycling of waste as well as to improve their revenue.

Speaking at the opening of Eco Birdd Recycling Company Pvt. Ltd. here, Mr. Sadashivaiah said the informal sector should take a cue from the success saga of milk unions in the State. The board, he said, would extend support to such ventures.

Mr. Sadashivaiah also complimented the efforts of Rizwan Khan, Managing Director of Eco Birdd, for his initiative in setting up a sophisticated e-waste recycling unit.

In his inaugural address, Adviser to the Chief Minister A. Ravindra congratulated the company for distinguishing itself by moving from the informal sector to the formal one.

Manohar, Zonal Officer of the Central Pollution Control Board noted that the Eco Birdd is the first authorised e-waste recycling plant in Karnataka and appreciated the efforts of the promoters.

Mr. Khan told The Hindu after the opening ceremony that the unit undertakes dismantling, refurbishing, reusing and recycling of the e-waste. The plant has a capacity of handling about 350 tonnes of e-waste a month, he said.

Separator

While metal parts in the e-waste will be removed and melted, the silicon waste will be sent to KSPCB authorised centres, Mr. Khan said.

He noted that the unit scientifically disposes off toxic metals, biologically active material, acids and plastic during the recycling process. The Eco Birdd is a cluster of recyclers who joined hands to get into the formal way of recycling e-waste.

The Eco Birdd has its plant at Azeez Sait Industrial Estate in Nayandahalli and can be contacted on Ph: 2274822; email – ecobirdd@gmail.com and on www.ecobirddrecycling.com.

Last Updated on Friday, 23 July 2010 05:49
 

Centre’s environment panel rejects yet another site

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Indian Express    29.06.2010

 Centre’s environment panel rejects yet another site

Nitin Jain Tags : environment, garbage Posted: Tue Jun 29 2010, 05:13 hrs

 Mohali:  Mohali dumping ground : High Court orders to select alternate site

Another site proposed for the setting up of a common municipal solid waste management facility (garbage dumping ground) at Swara-Rasanheri-Jhanjeri villages on Mohali’s outskirts has been rejected by the State Expert Appraisal Committee (SEAC) of the Union Ministry of Environment.

However, the SEAC’s site rejection report is yet to be considered by the Union Environment Ministry’s statutory body State-level Authority of Environment Impact Assessment (SAEIA), which is presently defunct in the absence of its chairman and member.

Till the final decision is taken on the fate of 58.79-acre site already acquired by the Greater Mohali Area Development Authority (GMADA), the Punjab and Haryana High Court has ordered to select a new alternate site to free Mohali’s densely inhabited Industrial Focal Point, Phase VIII-B, from a garbage dump, which Punjab Chief Minister Parkash Singh Badal had already ordered to relocate till June 2009 but to no avail.

For the selection of an alternate site, the High Court has asked Punjab Chief Secretary to constitute a committee, comprising competent officials of all departments concerned. Confirming the development, GMADA Chief Administrator Vivek Partap Singh told Newsline that as soon as the committee is formed, hunt for new alternate site will begin.

“We have also challenged the SEAC’s technical report rejecting the site before the SAEIA,” said he, while revealing that two representatives of the SEAC were part of the committee, which had selected the site in question.

Punjab Pollution Control Board (PPCB) Member Secretary Dr Babu Ram, who is also Member Secretary to SAEIA, said he has written to the Union Ministry of Environment to nominate the chairman and member of SAEIA to make it functional. “Till then, no such matter could be decided,” he confirmed, while adding that SEAC’s recommendation is examined from all aspects before SAEIA takes final decision. 

Not first
It was not the first site, which is likely to be dumped for Mohali’s garbage dumping ground. In September last, GMADA had dumped 76 acres site in Sector 102-A (earmarked in Master Plan) while declaring it “inappropriate”. While acquisition proceedings were still underway for Sector 102-A site before it was rejected, the present site in Swara-Rasanheri-Jhanjeri has already been acquired with only land acquisition award to be announced. “We had withheld the award awaiting final nod otherwise the money once disbursed would have also gone down the drain,” said GMADA CA.

Before almost 80 tonnes of solid waste daily generated from Mohali’s 2.5 lakh population was started dumping in Industrial Focal Point, Phase VIII-B, here, dumping ground was shifted from near Verka Milk Plant, Jagatpura and Mauli Baidwan villages following public protests.

Dispute
While Residential Welfare Society of the PSIEC Housing Complex has been fighting a legal battle to get dumping ground shifted from Industrial Focal Point, Phase VIII-B, the elected public representatives and residents of 28 villages around new site are up in arms against dumping of estimated 200 tonnes of untreated garbage and solid waste daily generated from Mohali for next 20 years in Swara-Rasanheri-Jhanjeri villages. Before selecting present site, several other sites in Phase I, VI, Sector 70 and elsewhere in Mohali were dumped following strong public protest.

Last Updated on Tuesday, 29 June 2010 11:44
 


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