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Solid Waste Management

Stress on source segregation of waste

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The Hindu      07.02.2011

Stress on source segregation of waste

Karthik Madhavan

Corporation has distributed two lakh bins to city's residents

Panacea for all ills: Corporation Commissioner Anshul Mishra replies to questions at ‘Glow Coimbatore' an interface on 'Clean Coimbatore: Government-Citizens Role', organised by TheHindu and The Indian Chamber of Commerce and Industry, in Coimbatore on Saturday. Chamber of Commerce President M. Krishnan (centre) and Vice-president R.R. Balasundaram (right) are in the picture. (Right) A Participant raising a query. — Photo: K. Ananthan
Panacea for all ills: Corporation Commissioner Anshul Mishra replies to questions at ‘Glow Coimbatore' an interface on 'Clean Coimbatore: Government-Citizens Role', organised by TheHindu and The Indian Chamber of Commerce and Industry, in Coimbatore on Saturday. Chamber of Commerce President M. Krishnan (centre) and Vice-president R.R. Balasundaram (right) are in the picture. (Right) A Participant raising a query. — Photo: K. Ananthan

Segregation of waste at source is a must for the success of the solid waste management programme, said Coimbatore Corporation Commissioner Anshul Mishra at ‘Project-Glow Coimbatore', an event The Hindu organised in association with the Indian Chamber of Commerce and Industry, Coimbatore, on Saturday.

In the well-attended session, Mr. Mishra said that the Corporation had distributed two lakh bins to help the city's residents segregate the degradable waste from the non-degradable waste. It would distribute another two lakh bins.

The Hindu and the Chamber had organised the event to provide an interface between Government officials and the city's residents. This is the second such interface.

Through a detailed presentation, the Commissioner said the civic body had been implementing the Rs. 96-crore solid waste management programme with funds sanctioned by the Central and State governments under the Jawaharlal Nehru National Urban Renewal Mission.

Since the launch of the programme in 2006, the number of hand carts had gone up from 500 to 1,980, seamless carts from zero to 200, vehicle mounted sweepers from zero to three, etc.

The collection of waste too had gone up, he said and added that 95 per cent of the city's waste was being collected.

The waste collected by conservancy workers was taken to roadside bins, from there by lorries to transit stations, where its gets compacted and then travels to the compost yard at Vellore.

Even as he was making the presentation by showing slides with pictures of improved transit stations and old dump yards at Kavundampalayam, Peelamedu and other places, the audience acknowledged the efforts taken through bouts of applauses.

He said the Corporation would soon launch special programmes to collect household hazardous waste, take up intensive awareness programmes and consider suggestions made at the meeting.

The Chamber president M. Krishnan submitted a memorandum to the Commissioner, wherein, among other things, he said the Corporation should consider setting up a 24x7 call centre for complaints.

The memorandum also said that walkers' path should be established around water bodies and CNG buses should be introduced. He also welcomed the gathering.

Vice president of the Chamber R.R. Balasundharam read out the memorandum that contained various suggestions for a clean Coimbatore. Chief of Bureau, The Hindu, Coimbatore, K.V. Prasad introduced the ‘Project-Glow Coimbatore' programme. Honorary Secretary G.D. Gopalakrishnan also spoke.

The programme saw the participation of the city's residents, representatives of various residents' welfare associations, a research student from France, a medical waste management expert among others.


  • “Corporation will launch programmes to collect household hazardous waste”
  • “Corporation should consider setting up a 24x7 call centre for complaints”
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    Corporation move to clear e-waste

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    The Hindu      05.02.2011

    Corporation move to clear e-waste

    Karthik Madhavan

    Coimbatore Corporation will soon take up household hazardous and e-waste management.

    Sources say the civic body, a stakeholder, has a responsible role to play in the collection, segregation and safe disposal of the household hazardous waste (HHW) and e-waste.

    This is in keeping with the Tamil Nadu Government's e-waste Policy 2010, wherein it states that infrastructure has to be created for collection, utilisation and disposal of the waste in an environmentally safe and sound manner, collection centres have to be set up under the public-private partnership mode and local bodies should play a prominent role and much more.

    The sources say HHW and e-waste collection programme will also ensure that they do not get mixed with other non-biodegradable solid wastes.

    The Corporation will set up two HHW and e-waste collection centres each in all the four zones. In all, there will be eight centres, which will come up at the ward offices. Conservancy workers will engage in door-to-door waste collection on a designated day on a weekly basis.

    The waste collected will be sent to authorised collection centres or registered recyclers, which will be done in association with the Tamil Nadu Pollution Control Board.

    On a trial basis, the civic body will start the project in a ward, the sources say. Once the project is extended to other wards, it will rope in private players.

    The sources say the aim is not only to manage the waste but also to create awareness among the public for, such waste have the potential to damage the environment by contaminating the air, water and also enter the food chain.

    The HHWs are pesticides/insecticides, aerosol cans, fluorescent lamps, light ballasts, objects with mercury, mothballs, rat poison, shoe polish, floor care products, cosmetics, hair remover, nail polish, furniture polish, anti-freeze products, etc.

     

    Plant to produce bio-manure from solid waste in the offing

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    The Hindu        02.02.2011

    Plant to produce bio-manure from solid waste in the offing

    S.Ganesan

    The Rs. 15-crore project to come up at dump in Ariyamangalam

    The Integrated Waste Management and Urban Services Company (Tamil Nadu), engaged in the business of managing municipal solid waste, organic waste, toxic waste, disposal of bio-medical waste, and other urban services in the State, would set up a Rs.15 crore plant to produce bio-manure from the solid waste generated in the city.

    The plant will be set up at the Tiruchi Corporation's garbage dump at Ariyamangalam in the city.

    The company got the nod for the project from the Corporation Council last week, ending the uncertainty that had prevailed after a section of the councillors opposed it in December.

    The Corporation, in 2007, awarded the contract for the establishment of a bio-manure production unit on a build, operate and transfer (BOT) basis to the Salem-based Sivasakthi Environment Development Trust. The Integrated Waste Management and Urban Services Company (IWMUST) will execute the project based on a novation agreement (a legal instrument that provides for an arrangement to substitute one party for another in a contract) between the two agencies.

    R.Sarto, Chief Operating Officer, IWMUST, who was in the city on Saturday, told The Hindu that the plant would process about 300 tonnes of solid wastes every day to produce about 40 to 45 tonnes of manure, which could be used for agriculture.

    The company would invest about Rs.10.50 crore on the civil works and the rest of the project cost would go towards machinery.

    The plant would have a pre-processing unit, which would sort out the solid waste and an aerobic digestion unit through which the solid waste would be biologically decomposed for a period of six to eight weeks.

    “The plant will be operational by April and to start with it will process about 50 tonnes of solid wastes a day. The capacity will be gradually scaled up to 300 tonnes in two to three months,” he said. Apart from the rent for the leased land, the company will also pay the Corporation for every tonne of bio-manure manufactured.

    Mr.Sarto said the plant will be of international standards and the company was already operating similar plants in Erode, Coonoor, Mettupalayam, Pollachi and Udumalpet.

    He also indicated that a scientific closure of the accumulated garbage of over 11.5 lakh tonnes lying at the dump at the next phase.

    The huge mounds of garbage were to be compacted and converted into lush green hillocks.

    Jerome Arockiaraj, Ariyamangalam zone chairperson of the Corporation, said the project will contribute to a significant improvement in the civic body's garbage disposal system. This has been a long pending problem and the project would be an ideal solution, he said.


  • Corporation gives its clearance to the company last week ending the uncertainty
  • 300 tonnes to be processed every day to produce about 40 to 45 tonnes of manure
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