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Solid Waste Management

New effort in solid waste management

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The Hindu              08.08.2013

New effort in solid waste management

Staff Reporter

Starting Thursday, for a week the Perur Town Panchayat will involve the town’s residents in solid waste management by encouraging them to segregate the waste they generate. And if they do so, they will get a prize.

The top 10 residents from each of the 15 wards will get a prize. The first prize winner will get a gold coin, the second prize winner a silver coin and the third prize winner a silk sari. Those in the fourth to the tenth position, will also get attractive prizes, says Executive Officer M. Tamil Selvan, the brain behind the initiative.

The objective is to engage the residents, help them take responsibility, help them understand the solid waste management programme and their role therein and also reward them for their participation.

Students

Along with students, the Town Panchayat’s conservancy workers and members of the self-help group, who manage the waste collected, will go around announcing the scheme to the residents by asking them to segregate the waste into degradable and non-degradable and only then hand over the same to the workers.

The students will record the pattern of waste generation, the way the town’s residents have segregated wastes in order to arrive at the winner.

Mr. Selvan says that at the end of the week, after analysing the results, the Town Panchayat administration will give away the prizes.

Welcoming the move, the residents say it will help them sustain the scheme, irrespective of whether Mr. Selvan is the Executive Officer or not.

“If the residents get involved and insist that the Town Panchayat take and process the waste in a segregated fashion, it means that the system has been institutionalised,” says K. Jayaraman, a resident.

At present, with the help of the SHG members, the Town Panchayat collects waste and has them segregated on its premises.

The degradable waste ends up as manure at an old dump yard that is more a garden now.

The non-degradable wastes are segregated into milk covers, oil covers, bottles, carry bags, white plastics, black plastics, PVCs, aluminium, copper, etc and sold to recyclers.

The money made from sales — the non-degradables and the compost — goes to the group members, says Mr. Selvan.

Challenge

But the challenge remains. Resident N. Pradeep Kumar says that being a temple town that sees a good number of pilgrims, the garbage generation is as much visitors as residents.

Plus, there are number of wedding halls.

The Town Panchayat needs to at the job every day. And to do so it needs a strategy — very different from how it has engaged the residents, he adds.

Objective is to engage the residents, help them take responsibility and also reward them for their participation.

 

New facility for waste awaits green nod

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The Hindu               02.08.2013

New facility for waste awaits green nod

Staff Reporter

Environmental clearance will be obtained before starting Kuthambakkam plant: Corporation

The Chennai Corporation has informed the National Green Tribunal (NGT) that environmental safeguards and approvals for the proposed solid waste management facility at Kuthambakkam would be obtained before starting any construction activity on the identified land.

Corporation commissioner Vikram Kapur made this assertion in response to an application filed by R. Arumugam, an agriculturist and resident of the village, who alleged the proposed facility would cause pollution in the area.

The NGT Bench had granted an interim injunction restraining the civic body from setting up such a facility on grazing land near Kuthambakkam, on the city’s outskirts. The matter came up for hearing on Thursday.

Mr. Kapur said, “The dumping grounds at Kodungaiyur have been in use for more than three decades. Initially, there were not many habitation clusters near the dumping grounds, but as days passed, residential colonies proliferated. Further, these grounds are getting fully exhausted.”

The Corporation was under pressure to seek alternative sites for setting up facilities for processing and disposing of waste in scientifically-designed sanitary landfill sites, as per specifications laid down in the Municipal Solid Waste (Management and Handling) Rules, 2000. The Corporation was already behind schedule in setting up the waste processing facilities, he said.

He said the Corporation had neither started any developmental activity nor awarded the contract to any bidder. “The proposed facility is an industrial activity and not crude garbage dumping. There are already industries on the approach road to the proposed land site,” he said.

Seeking dismissal of the application, he said the project would safeguard against factors affecting the environment including contamination of waterbodies, agricultural land and groundwater resources. The matter will come up for further hearing on August 14.

Tribunal calls for Statewide measures

The NGT also said it would direct authorities to evolve a comprehensive plan to prevent illegal dumping of municipal waste across the State.

Hearing applications filed against illegal dumping by local bodies, including Pallavaram, Tambaram, and Rasipuram municipalities, in water bodies, the Bench said it would ask the government, in due course, to identify three sites in each of the districts for establishing solid waste management facilities.

Stating that a monitoring committee would be created to oversee the process, the Bench said, “What we want to see is a scientific arrangement put in place so that arbitrary dumping does not continue.”

 

Corporation 'turns' waste into gold

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The New Indian Express                31.07.2013 

Corporation 'turns' waste into gold

96 metric tons of thin plastic waste below 40 microns that is generated in the city needs to be segregated for road laying purposes | Express
96 metric tons of thin plastic waste below 40 microns that is generated in the city needs to be segregated for road laying purposes | Express

In an effort to reduce thin plastic waste in the city, the Corporation of Chennai has announced a new initiative, in which the public and conservancy workers will be given prizes for segregating thin plastic wastes in their day to day garbage cleansing. The announcement was made by Chennai Mayor Saidai S Duraisamy during a recent Corporation council meeting.

During the question hour, one of the councillors raised a question about the measures taken by the civic body prevent the use of thin plastic waste as banning plastic products less than 40 microns seemed to have no effect on the population.

Responding to the question, the Mayor said, “In order to segregate plastic waste less than 40 microns, the Corporation has set up separate garbage bins in all the wards. These thin plastic waste will be used to lay plastic roads”.

He also added that the civic body had stated the importance of segregating thin plastic waste in its budget report, as per the guidance of the Chief Minister. “As a shot in the arm to the effort of segregating such wastes, the general public and conservancy workers will be given prizes on the basis of drawing of lots,” he said.

As a pilot process, the system will be implemented for first three months at a cost of `18 lakh.

A total of 4,800 metric ton of waste is generated every day in the city. According to the Solid Waste Management guide, plastic waste makes up  for about six per cent of the total waste. Of this, thin plastic waste, that is less than 40 microns makes up for two per cent. “So a total of 96 metric tons of thin plastic waste needs to be separated from the overall waste generated in the city,” said the Corporation’s agenda.

Presently, 12 metric tons of shredded plastic is generated every week.

 


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