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Solid Waste Management

Incineration is the way to go: companies

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The Hindu                    03.04.2013

Incineration is the way to go: companies

Wanted: Green, cleanThe Corporation is looking for technologies that will not pollute the Kuthambakkam area —Photo: B. Jothi Ramalingam
Wanted: Green, cleanThe Corporation is looking for technologies that will not pollute the Kuthambakkam area —Photo: B. Jothi Ramalingam.

Presentations made for proposed Kuthambakkam plant to deal with solid waste.

Mass combustion incineration technology dominated the proceedings at Ripon Buildings on Tuesday.

Of the six presentations made for proposals for the proposed Kuthambakkam waste-to-energy plant by company representatives from various countries, five were on incineration technology. Only one proposal was about gasification technology.

The proceedings were part of the Chennai Corporation’s attempt to select a company to draw up a plan for the proposed Kuthambakkam plant, which will deal with the city’s increasing burden of solid waste. As the city’s solid waste has high moisture content, the civic body has so far failed to find a suitable technology to dispose of it.

The Corporation had earlier short-listed six companies out of 10.

The proposals were screened by a technical committee of experts. Official said the experts, who have completed scrutinising the proposals, are likely to reject technologies that would pollute neighbourhoods.

Incineration technology uses a chemical reaction, in which carbon, hydrogen and other elements in the solid waste mix with oxygen in the combustion zone, and generate heat. More than 5,000 kg of air — a massive amount — is required for each tonne of solid waste to burn.

The presentation on the incinerator systems focussed on maximising the heat output and minimising emissions. The result presented was a complete incineration of solid waste, with the production of an inert residue, which was one-tenth of the initial weight.

However, concerns with such a system include the emission of fine particulate matter and toxic gases, as well as the disposal of liquid waste.

Of the initial 10 bids received by the civic body from private companies, for the setting up of plants to process municipal solid waste, six had proposed that such a facility be set up in Kuthambakkam. Many of the solid waste management plants visited by a team of Corporation officials in countries such as China a few months ago have adopted incineration technology.

A chunk of the 4,900 tonnes of the city’s waste is likely to be processed in the proposed Kuthambakkam plant. Energy is likely to be generated if the technical committee clears the proposals.

Initially more than 2,500 tonnes of municipal solid waste generated in the southern parts of the city will be processed in Kuthambakkam. Preference will be given to the waste-to-energy technology but the identification of clean technology to suit the wet solid waste of Chennai will be a challenge, said officials.

 

Local waste, localised disposal

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The Hindu                         01.04.2013

Local waste, localised disposal

Staff Reporter

Compost yards placed strategically across localities, are making a comeback in the city.

To deal with the mounting problem of garbage collection and disposal, the Chennai Corporation has decided to rejuvenate one of its old proposals — compost yards in every zone that will deal with waste locally.

Bids for construction of such facilities in areas such as R.K. Nagar have been floated this week. To begin with, the R.K. Nagar yard is expected to process ten tonnes of biodegradable waste per month.

In other areas such as Perambur, identification of land for compost yards is underway. At least ten grounds of land are required to commission a compost yard at the local level.

“We have created awareness among residents in Mottai Garden, Old Washermenpet, to set up a compost yard in their locality,” said an official. Around 250 households are already participating in the segregation of municipal solid waste, to facilitate operations at the new compost yard, he added.

Some years ago, the Chennai Corporation had compost yards in all its 10 zones. But they fell into disuse, and are not operational at present. The current project is envisaging their revival.

According to officials, many added zones such as Sholinganallur have facilities for compost yards created by erstwhile local bodies. Such facilities too, will be revived by the civic body.

The aim of the initiative is to reduce the Corporation’s burden of collecting increasing volumes of garbage. The coming months may witness a flurry of activity on local solutions to the problem of municipal solid waste in the city, the official said.

An earlier proposal for larger compost yards to handle nearly 300 tonnes of garbage generated from suburbs such as Tambaram, Pallavaram and Alandur Municipalities was a failure. In 2007, the erstwhile Alandur Municipality decided to pull out of the project.

 

Commercial entities to set up bio-gas plants

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The Hindu                      28.03.2013

Commercial entities to set up bio-gas plants

Staff Reporter

Commercial establishments in the city are likely to set up their own bio-gas plants for processing their food waste. The Chennai Corporation, at a meeting in Ripon Buildings with representatives of hotels, marriage halls and other commercial food business operators asked the traders to commission decentralised waste processing facility based on a technology of Bhabha Atomic Research Centre (BARC).

The meeting was organised to resolve a deadlock on the issue of conservancy charges in Chennai. At the meeting, Corporation officials indicated that new conservancy charges levied on these establishments, which had been fiercely opposed by them, would be reduced if the traders’ association commissioned their own plants based on such proven technology.

A number of food-business operators, including large hotels and marriage halls, had been asked to pay more conservancy charges by the Chennai Corporation. The city has more than 20,000 commercial entities including large food-business operators and marriage halls that generate large amount of municipal solid waste every day.

As the commercial establishments did not agree to the increase in conservancy charges by the Chennai Corporation, a series of meetings were organised over the past few months to resolve the deadlock.

Commercial establishments that use 1,100 litre bins for conservancy were asked to pay Rs.1.31 lakh to the Chennai Corporation, according to the new proposal. Similarly, the establishments that use 120 litre bins were asked to pay Rs.14,600. The charges for marriage halls with a seating capacity of more than 1,000 were increased from Rs.12,000 to Rs.86,400 per year.

BARC had already knocked on the doors of the Chennai Corporation to sell its garbage segregation technology and the civic body has suggested that commercial establishments use the indigenously-developed technology.

This initiative may also revive source segregation of garbage and is likely to be yet another option for generating energy using waste. The technology will also facilitate lighting up of streetlights using the energy generated. Around 30 per cent of 4900 tonnes of municipal solid waste generated in the city is biodegradable. The technology offers a decentralised way of garbage disposal as 300 sq. ft. of land is enough to process one tonne of waste a day.

 


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