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Solid Waste Management

Kovilpatti focuses on cleaning up e-waste

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The Hindu            09.11.2013

Kovilpatti focuses on cleaning up e-waste

Staff Reporter

Kovilpatti Environment League has gone a step further to clean the environment by collecting e-wastes, according to K. Vijaya Karthikeyan, Sub Collector of Kovilpatti.

Through this programme, the students and the public would also be guided to dispose of e-wastes at collection points established at vital installations in Kovilpatti, he said here on Friday. E-wastes generated at workplaces, houses and other companies could be disposed of in the collection points set up at Kovilpatti old bus stand, railway station besides school premises in Kovilpatti.

Students from 19 schools in Kovilpatti would be involved in collecting the e-waste.

With active participation of Kovilpatti Rotary club and voluntary organisations, the volunteers had stuck posters indicating the locations of collection points.

He said a meeting would be convened with the principals of the schools on Monday to devise strategies for promoting the programme. During a week-long programme from October 21, many students had volunteered to collect plastic bottles and paper wastes found in and around school campuses.

The programme launched by the league since its inception evoked a good response from the public.

“Since Kovilpatti is witnessing a considerable growth of floating population, top priority is accorded to maintain the town clean”, the Sub Collector said.

Plans were also afoot to spread this environment friendly initiative in all 36 wards under Kovilpatti Municipality limits with the involvement of environmental activists, the Sub Collector added.

 

Corporation’s poultry waste management gets better

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The Hindu             07.11.2013

Corporation’s poultry waste management gets better

Staff Reporter

Five vehicles with closed boxes will collect wastes from five zones

The Coimbatore civic body’s poultry waste management got a step better after a tie-up with a private company for processing the same.

Inaugurated

The new process was inaugurated at the Corporation’s main office on Tuesday.

According to sources in the Coimbatore Corporation, the civic body would send the two — three tonne-poultry waste — on weekends it is five — six tonnes — to Vellalore, from where the private company, VKS Farms, would transport the same to its fodder manufacturing unit.

The sources said that the Corporation had distributed plastic bags (bio-bags) to poultry shops in the city to dump the waste. The civic body did not stop with distributing the bags, though. It also collected the waste every morning, right at the doorstep.

There were five vehicles with closed boxes to collect the wastes from the five zones.

Until recently, the Corporation would dump in pits in Vellalore the waste that was collected. This move had faced opposition from the residents of Vellalore, who had complained that it only worsened the situation at the yard. The new arrangement was environment friendly, the sources pointed out.

K. Mounasamy, Assistant General Manager, VKS Farms, said that the company would use the poultry waste to manufacture meat meal and concentrate feed. It got the waste from the Corporation at no cost.

As for the Corporation there would be a savings of Rs. 18 lakh a year with the new arrangement.

 

'Chennai garbage can generate 12 crore litre of aviation fuel'

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The New Indian Express            06.11.2013

'Chennai garbage can generate 12 crore litre of aviation fuel'

The 5,000 tonnes of garbage generated in the city per day has the potential to be converted to 12 crore litre of aviation fuel and 4.5 crore litre of diesel per year.

An expert told Express that through plasma gasification and vitrification process, a technology developed by NASA, the garbage could be generated into wealth.

Vinod Bose, coordinator in South India, for the Indian arm of US-based Solena Fuels, said his company had the proven expertise and was vying for a tie up with the State government under the public-private partnership. The cost for the project would be around Rs 3,000 crore and many European nations would go for this technology, he said and added that the investment could be recovered after a period of around eight years.

He said under the technology, segregation of garbage at source was not necessary. “It is a complete recycling process without producing any harmful products,” he says. The technology used a mixture of feedstock to power its systems, including agricultural wastes, urban wastes, or any other matter that was carbon based.

“The feedstock is prepared and fed into a plasma reactor, which holds one or more plasma torches, which heat the reactor to roughly 5,000 degree Celsius. The high temperature plasma field is used to transform all organic components into a clean and useful synthetic gas” (biosyngas), he said.

“Since, the chemistry of the reactor is controlled, the major gases formed are carbon monoxide and hydrogen. Once formed, biosyngas is sent to a gas-conditioning island where it is quenched very quickly and rapidly cooled. This cooling causes precipitation of volatile metals into the slag. This first cleaning stage removes any residual sulphur and chlorides, and the next step removes mercury. Almost 99 per cent of the particulate matter will be removed”, he explained. Once this phase was completed, the syngas would be compressed and sent to a gas turbine to produce renewable power and steam in a combined cycle or the biosyngas would be delivered to a Fischer Tropsch process to produce biofuels, including biojet fuel, bionaptha, and biodiesel.

“It is a complete recycling process without production of any harmful by-products. All processes are indoor and so there is no disturbance to the surroundings. Besides, it requires only 20 acres of land to house the project”, he said.“The fuel produced is ‘ready-to-use’ and no modifications to engines are required,’’ Bose says.

This could significantly reduce greenhouse gas emissions, emanating from open land dumps and the project would eliminate the need for landfills or garbage dumps and free land for productive use as well as avoid pollution of the environment.

 


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