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Waste-to-energy project may start soon, says KMC

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The Times of India 22.08.2009

Waste-to-energy project may start soon, says KMC

KOLKATA: Kolkata Municipal Corporation (KMC) is in talks with city power utility CESC for a pilot project that will convert garbage into energy. The talks are in the initial stage and are expected to be crystallized in eight to 10 weeks.

Sources said KMC had already identified a site in Garden Reach for handover to CESC in case the project went through. Though mayor Bikash Ranjan Bhattacharya refused to spell out further details till the project was finalized, he acknowledged that a pilot waste-to-energy project was on the cards. "We will watch how it goes and then go for a bigger commercial project," Bhattacharjee said at the sidelines of a seminar on waste management organized by the Indian Chamber of Commerce.

CESC managing director Sumantra Banerjee, too, acknowledged the utility was in talks with KMC. "We are exploring opportunities. If the pilot project takes shape, it will have a major corporate social responsibility component too, because waste management has become a huge problem in cities like Kolkata," he said.

Municipal solid waste (MSW) has been growing exponentially in Kolkata with the current quantity pegged at 3,500 tonnes per day against 2,800 tonnes per day some years ago. Though an initiative was taken to dispose part of the garbage by processing it at a modern fertilizer unit in 1999, it has now become defunct as there are no takers for the compost it generates.

The proposal for a CESC pilot project gains added significance given that two other initiatives have been non-starters. A scientific landfill, as opposed to current practice of simply dumping garbage at Dhapa, hasn't taken off. Neither has a Rs 600-crore proposal to set up a 54-MW waste-to-energy plant by US-based firm Astonfield Management taken shape.

At present, there is only one waste-to-energy generation project in the country: a 4 KW plant in Hyderabad. On Thursday, Howrah Municipal Corporation handed over a 14-acre plot at Sarenga, Sankrail to Hyderabad-based

CESC now has to consider the project's financial viability, the technology appropriate for handling the city's low-calorific value waste and the tariff structure. West Bengal Green Development Energy Corporation Ltd (WBGDECL) managing director S P Gon Chowdhury said that though a tariff of Rs 5 per unit had been declared by the state electricity regulatory commission, issues like tipping fee, sorting of the garbage at source and incentives from the civic body, as well as carbon credit, needed to be resolved to attract private investors.

"Civic bodies need to change their mindset if they are serious about tackling the garbage issue. If a private company does take care of a section of it, they should get an incentive. Instead, all that civic bodies are concerned about is grabbing a pie from the carbon benefit that the project will accrue," he said, adding that half the funding should come from civic bodies as the project has a major social component.

At present, the cost of setting up a waste-to-energy plant is around Rs 8-9 crore, double that of a thermal power plant. The Centre provides a subsidy of Rs 1.5 crore per MW but that is not enough to bridge the viability gap.

Apart from the pilot project, KMC and ICC have decided to join hands for a training programme for ragpickers so that they can segregate waste at source. The mayor said ragpickers' service would be of great help in segregating waste, especially plastics, since it is a major environmental hazard. "We will not only give training, but also find means for their livelihood," Bhattacharya said. State environment chief law officer Biswajit Mukherjee said ragpickers were key stakeholders in the project and needed to be given proper incentives.
 

MC team's surprise raid at garbage plant

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The Times of India 22.08.2009

MC team's surprise raid at garbage plant

CHANDIGARH: After getting numerous complaints from city residents, a team of councillors led by the mayor along with officials of MC and UT’s environment wing conducted a surprise raid on the Garbage Processing Plant, Dadumajra on Friday. Councillors claimed that plant authorities were still burning the garbage, thus spreading stench.

Talking to TOI, councillor Chandermukhi Sharma said though officials of the plant are claiming that they are burning Refuse-Derived Fuel (RDF), but during the raid it came out that it was almost garbage, which was not processed. The team then apprised the UT officials in this regard.

It may be recalled that mayor Kamlesh along with councillors had conducted checking of the plant around a week back and had claimed that authorities were befooling public, MC and UT by not processing the garbage and producing the fuel out of it.

Later, the mayor convened a meeting of the councillors, following which a delegation met UT finance secretary Sanjay Kumar. After hearing the plea of the elected members, Kumar constituted a team of the technical experts and officials of the environment wing to look into the matter and ordered them to submit the report within a week.
 

CGWB reveals a huge ground water reservoir

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The Times of India 21.08.2009

CGWB reveals a huge ground water reservoir

LUCKNOW: Call it an irony of sorts. At a time when there is brouhaha over the depleting ground water table, the central ground water board (CGWB) has revealed a huge ground water reservoir hidden deep within the earth's crust. Virtually untapped, the extent of this reservoir in UP alone is estimated to be almost 1,000 billion cubic metre, or more than 10 times of water in country's second largest dam, Bhakra Nangal.

The Bhakra Nangal dam has close to 10 billion cubic metre of water, enough to meet the water requirement of Chattisgarh, parts of Haryana, Punjab and Delhi. It is anybody's guess what the said underground water reservoir, cradled in an area of about 400 metres could do.

Consultant, ministry of water resources, government of India, S K Sharma said that the said reservoir is being continuously recharged from the mountain foothills and vertical percolation. "UP is lucky to have such a huge reservoir of ground water. All one needs is to tap it,'' he said, while talking to TOI on the sidelines of a two-day state level workshop on `Ground Water Management In Uttar Pradesh' organised in the state capital on Thursday. The workshop was organised by the state water resources agency (SWaRa) and state water resources data analysis centre (SWaRDAC).

Sharma said that the reservoir is peculiarly placed below the central Ganga plain which has been stretching over a period of time. The plain comprises vast layers of sand placed one on the other. It is these layers which have the ability to retain huge quantity of water.

The existence of the reservoir gains special attention in the wake of the drought which has hit over 2/3rd area of the state. "The reservoir can be used in crisis management. Even if one is able to tap just 5% of the total water available it would suffice for a major section of population deprived of drinking water, at least,'' he said.

Sharma said that the drilling operations for water are being carried out up to the depth of 125 to 150 metres. "That's where most of the pressure is, resulting in continuous depletion of ground water table,'' he said. Of course, drilling for water up to a limit is there because of the cost consideration. The greater the depth, more the cost of extraction of water. "It is only in the rarest of the rare cases that the drilling is carried out to a depth upto 200 metres,'' Sharma said.

Experts insist that while the deeper layers are being exploited to tap the ground water, the upper layers could be held up for recharging them. Sharma said that the state government should incorporate exploitation of the deeper water reservoirs as part of their ground water policy.

Interestingly, the state government seems to be in no mood to tap the resource. Principal secretary (ground water and minor irrigation) Susheel Kumar said that deeper exploitation of the ground water would cost more. "The cost would have to be passed on to the consumers after all,'' he said. Instead, the state government intends to focus on exploitation of middle layers only.
 


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