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At Model Colony, garbage is now energy

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Indian Express 14.11.2009

At Model Colony, garbage is now energy

This news should gladden the hearts of Puneites hassled by garbage in every nook and corner of the city. The Model Colony ward of the Pune Municipal Corporation has set up the city’s first civic biogas plant, which will generate enough energy to light up around 70 streetlights for seven hours a day and save Rs 5 lakh for the civic body every year. And, the input will be five tonnes of wet garbage collected from within the ward.

The PMC has commissioned Enprotech Solutions for the project. While the project was kicked off on Friday, it will take another month to actually generate energy. The civic body has used the bio-methanisation technique developed by the Bhabha Atomic Research Centre for the purpose.

BJP Corporator Jyotsna Sardeshpande said, “After checking out a similar project at a Mumbai housing complex, we decided to execute it in our ward. And it took a whole year to actually start it.”

The Model Colony (Ward 34) houses about 4,000 properties and the daily garbage comes to around eight tonnes. Of this, nearly half the portion falls under the category of wet garbage, and hence is biodegradable.

“While collecting garbage from people, it will be segregated as dry and wet and it will undergo further segregation at the ramp. The wet garbage would be put into a crusher and then to the digester. After further procedures, we would finally get two components: biogas and slurry, which could later be used as manure,” Enprotech Solutions director Sanjay Nandre said.

The plant has been constructed on a 500-sq m land in the colony. “The plant would not bring any flies, mosquitoes and not generate bad smell, as it will function in an enclosed manner.”

Last Updated on Saturday, 14 November 2009 11:09
 

Walia & team to visit London, Bangkok to study sewerage

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Indian Express 14.11.2009

Walia & team to visit London, Bangkok to study sewerage

A delegation of officials led by Delhi Urban Development Minister A K Walia is set to visit Bangkok and London to study the success of setting up sewage interceptors in the two cities. The twin visits come barely two months after an austerity call given by Chief Minister Sheila Dikshit.

Walia said the delegation is expected to leave by this month-end.

Walia had recently visited Bangalore to study the system of having holograms on batches of alcohol bottles before reaching the government vending counters. The idea being to curb distribution of illicit liquor, as implemented by the Karnataka government.

While both London and Bangkok have interceptor sewers constructed to curb amount of filth and sewage thrown into Thames and Chao Phraya rivers, respectively, the Delhi Jal Board (DJB) plans a Rs 1,400-crore project to set up interceptors as part of the government’s plans to clean up the Yamuna. The first interceptor on the Thames was built in the 19th century to treat the river’s waters.

About the visit, Walia said, “It’s a big project, so we need to study these systems at great length before beginning work. Both these projects have been implemented on a huge scale, so we are hoping to study them well and, if possible, emulate them for Yamuna.”

Besides Walia, the delegation includes DJB Chief Executive Officer Ramesh Negi, an Urban Development Ministry additional secretary and a senior Jal Board official.

The project, planned with Centre’s assistance, is expected to treat about 90 million gallons per day (MGD) of sewage water before it is released into the Yamuna. Only 612 MGD is treated now before being flushed into the river.

Last Updated on Saturday, 14 November 2009 11:02
 

Draft urban development policy dreams big

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The New Indian Express 14.11.2009

Draft urban development policy dreams big


BANGALORE: Complete with plans for a State Urbanisation Commission, the state version of the national urban renewal mission and an urban version of the state’s ‘bhoomi’ agriculture land records project— the Urban Development Policy draft released by the government on Friday makes for many grand urban dreams.

It came as no surprise that Urban Development Minister Suresh Kumar was quick to brush aside some of its prickly issues: that para statals like the Bangalore Water Supply and Sewerage Board (BWSSB) shall be brought under the control of their respective urban local bodies (ULBs) or that urban development authorities (UDAs) like the Bangalore Development Authority (BDA) shall cease to be for lack of constitutional validity.

“The main focus of the policy is the second and third-tier cities,” he said, even as references to these bodies and also those like the state slum clearance board stand out prominently in the draft.

The government had in December last constituted a committee under former chief secretary Dr A Ravindra to formulate an urban development policy in the context of decentralisation and the need to equip urban local bodies with administrative, financial and technical capacities to manage themselves.

Ravindra was assisted by Ashwin Mahesh from Indian Institute of Management, Bangalore in the preparation of the draft policy.

Suresh Kumar said that the said policy shall see Karnataka take the lead in preparing for a time when India is projected to be home to the world’s largest urban population, in 2040. The policy will be taken before the state cabinet in January, he said.

The draft policy is now in the public domain. Besides eliciting suggestions and objections from all local bodies and the cross section of the general public in the state, the government will also seek suggestions from the urban development departments of other states, the Minister said.

The exercise seeking suggestions and objections shall run over the next one month — till December 15.

Water and land for thought

Minister Suresh Kumar’s statement on focus outside Bangalore apart, the draft urban development policy has ample reminders of some controversies. The privatisation of water supply for one.

Highlights

● Separate urban arts/heritage commissions for Bangalore and Mysore and another for the entire state.

● Local bodies to chalk out individual economic development plans.

● KURM on the lines of JNNURM

● Review of various land use regulations for a new urban land policy such that the land acquisitions by KIABD too shall be in consultation with the municipal or planning authorities only.

Last Updated on Saturday, 14 November 2009 10:35
 


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