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Solid Waste Management

Living amid garbage for decades

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The Hindu 20.11.2009

Living amid garbage for decades

Rajesh B. Nair

500 tonnes of garbage dumped on open land near Karuvadikuppam

 


Problem is because of delay in implementing solid waste management rules

“Land identified is ideal for establishing dumping yard as it is away from human habitation”


PUDUCHERRY: For decades, residents of Karuvadikuppam are bearing the brunt of the “government’s indifference” in not developing sites identified for dumping solid waste collected from areas in Puducherry and Oulgaret Municipality limits. Around 500 tonnes of garbage, including general waste generated in hospitals, markets and residential areas is being dumped in an open land near Karuvadikuppam.

Residents complain that they are forced to live in an unhygienic condition for the last 30 years. “When the situation worsened during the recent rain, we were compelled to block trucks coming to the yard. The entire area was stinking. Now, the government is dumping garbage after declaring Section 144 of Cr.P.C.,” * Ramanan, a resident said.

A visit to the area revealed that even during day time, mosquito menace was high. “The problem is worse during evening. We light at least two mosquito coils every night to sleep. Excessive use of such repellents has made several people sick,” a woman resident said, pointing at rashes all over the body of her child.

Almost all residents have some kind of skin allergy, she said. It is routine for people to fall sick, especially running temperature, she added.The main cause of the problem is the delay in implementing the solid waste management rules in the two municipalities. A total of 37 acres of land in the north of Mettupalayam Industrial Estate was identified, of which 23 acres was allotted for a truck terminal and 15 acres for development as Solid Waste Landfill. After an environment impact study found the place suitable, it was acquired and handed over to Oulgaret Municipality in the year 2000. The expenditure incurred towards land acquisition was Rs 8.12 crore.

Later, the proposal to establish the dumping yard was abandoned. After a few years, a part of the land was provided to the Local Administration Department to establish a truck terminal, which though inaugurated two years ago, remains unused till now.

A retired government official told The Hindu that the land was an ideal location for constructing a dumping yard as it was away from human habitation.

After the Mettupalyam project was abandoned, 22 acres of land was acquired in Kurumbapet four years ago for dumping waste under Integrated Solid Waste Management Project.

As per the Municipal Solid Wastes (Management and Handling) Rules, 2000 notified by the Ministry of Environment and Forests, all State governments should set up waste processing and disposal facilities by December 31, 2003.

Officials in the Local Administration Department said the Kurumbapet yard would become functional in the beginning of next year. The Union government had sanctioned Rs 49.66 crore under the Jawaharlal Nehru National Urban Renewal Mission for carrying out the Integrated Solid Waste Management Project, he added.

Last Updated on Friday, 20 November 2009 02:13
 

The onus is on people to ensure cleanliness: official

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The Hindu 20.11.2009

The onus is on people to ensure cleanliness: official

Special Correspondent

Workshop on solid waste management inaugurated


SOUND ADVICE: Deputy Commissioner Pankaj Kumar Pandey inaugurating a workshop on solid waste management in Shimoga on Thursday.

SHIMOGA: Deputy Commissioner Pankaj Kumar Pandey said here on Thursday that it was the responsibility of every enlightened citizen to maintain cleanliness in every part of the city.

He was inaugurating a workshop on solid waste management organised jointly by the State Urban Development Organisation of Mysore and the District Training Institute.

He said that the disposal of solid waste should be taken up in such a way that it did not cause any harm to the environment.

He suggested that the process of disposal of solid waste should start from every house and those who neglected it should be penalised. He asked the municipal authorities to create awareness through various programmes about the need to keep cities clean.

Vice-Chancellor of Kuvempu University B.S. Sherigara, who was the chief guest, said that there was a need to make Shimoga a model district by taking up the proper disposal of solid waste by the municipal bodies.

He said that if cleanliness was visible in Tirthahalli town in Shimoga district and Koppa town in Chikmagalur, it appeared to be because of the efficient management of solid waste material by the local bodies there.

He said that most of the countries had introduced several measures to treat solid waste material both in the houses and hotels.

Prof. Sherigara said that a plant had been set up on the university campus to treat effluents from hostels and use them for vermi-culture.

Secretary of National Education Society S.V. Thimmaiah said that it was wrong to think that disposal of garbage was the responsibility of the civic bodies alone and observed that the cleaning exercise could be taken up efficiently if voluntary organisations joined hands with the civic bodies.

Vice-President of the City Municipal Council Lakshamma Sannappa presided over the function.

Convener of the State Urban Development Organisation V. Jagannath spoke on the objective of holding the workshop. Principal of the District Training Institute Nagaraj welcomed the gathering. Municipal Engineer Manukumar proposed a vote of thanks.

Last Updated on Friday, 20 November 2009 02:04
 

Japan unit recycles waste to make rails — for Delhi Metro

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Indian Express 18.11.2009

Japan unit recycles waste to make rails — for Delhi Metro

Riding on the Delhi Metro, it’s hard to believe where the rails for the high-speed trains get their strength: from unwanted plastic garbage in a nondescript industrial Japanese township called Kitakyushu.

At a sprawling, self-contained steel facility in the heart of the country’s industrial area, high-speed rails and other steel products are churned out by Japanese giant Nippon Steel. Delhi Metro is among the railway systems in different countries that procure steel, and rails, from this company.

But the story lies in the making of this steel. Amid stacks of steel and iron, a stack of smelly plastic bags and containers stick out like a giant sore thumb. This urban waste from Kitakyushu area powers the furnaces of Nippon Steel.

Company officials say Nippon Steel has learnt and patented the harnessing of municipal waste. Unlike most facilities, including Indian companies, that incinerate plastic to use as fuel, Nippon Steel is now treating plastic to directly create energy sources for steel production: creating coke, hydrocarbon, and coke oven gas.

In a country with a huge disposable culture — even food and fruit come packed in plastic here, with no ban on the material even in the ‘eco-town’ of Kitakyushu — plastic waste is not hard to come by. An average Japanese, say studies here, throws away 10 kilograms of plastic each year. And in the factory area, where mountains of plastic are separated manually each day, two giant air ducts give company to the two workers posted there to keep down the smell from large quantities of plastic waste.

“We need coke and oil to fuel the furnaces. Whether we get it from a mine or the local garbage can, we need it — that is unavoidable,” says Y Arita, from the company. It is not a totally carbon emission-free process, though, as energy is used to treat plastic.

Arita says orders for steel from India have risen in the past year — besides rails for high-speed Delhi Metro trains for its Phase-II, the demand from the country is for generators and automobiles.

Concern for environment
In Kitakyushu, plastic, and the steel furnaces belching smoke, are a huge concern — and a sort of debt the community wants to redeem. In the environment museum, 20 minutes from the Nippon facility, senior citizen Yamamoto, leader of a local women’s group and environmental volunteer, bends over a freshly cleaned plastic wrapper, cutting and folding to morph it into a butterfly.

Kitakyushu got so polluted in the 1960s, Yamamoto says, that the area’s adjoining sea was called the ‘sea of death’. Now, the area feverishly works at reducing its carbon footprint, and has won acclaim from the United Nations for its recycling and waste and pollution treatment.

At the museum, plastic bottles and cans are displayed almost like works of art: in a way of expressing that garbage is a part of life and should be recognised as a challenge.

Last Updated on Wednesday, 18 November 2009 11:23
 


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