The Hindu 14.12.2010
Waste management to improve
Karthik Madhavan
— Photo: M. Periasamy

Litter-free:Coimbatore may soon have clean roads, as the Corporation has
initiated efforts to improve waste management.
COIMBATORE: The over 90 vehicles the Coimbatore Corporation uses to
transport solid waste will double their trip in a month’s time.
From four trips a day a lorry, it will go up to eight. And, even as
the lorries collect more waste, make more trips and, thereby, consume
more fuel, the civic body will get to save Rs. 4 crore a year.
The reason behind this is that the Corporation has established four
transit stations to better its solid waste management system.
Explains K. Saravanakumar, assistant executive engineer: “the lorries
that carried the waste straight from the bins on roads to the Vellalore
compost yard had to travel more than 20 km a day and this consumed more
time”.
Cost cutting
Now, those lorries will only ferry the waste from the bins to the
nearest transfer station, from where the waste will be compacted and
transported to the compost yard by a private contractor. This will save
time, fuel and money.
In association with the contractor, Coimbatore Integrated Waste
Management Private Limited, the Corporation has established the transit
stations at Peelamedu, Ukkadam, alongside Sathyamangalam Road and is in
the process of constructing one at Ondipudur.
Once the four stations are fully operational, the waste collection
will go up. The expenditure on fuel will also come down and help the
civic body save Rs. 4 crore, says Commissioner Anshul Mishra.
Garbage, collected door-to-door by conservancy workers, will be
dumped in bins, from which the lorries will take it to the stations.
The reduction in travel will increase the collection to about 95 per
cent, says A. Lakshmanan, Project Director, Solid Waste Management. At
present, the civic body gathers around 600 tonnes of waste a day.
To augment the waste collection efforts, the Corporation has bought
11 refuse collector compactors (lorries) and 500 bins of 600 litre each.
Mr. Mishra says efforts are also on to distribute two lakh more waste
baskets to houses within city limits. Already 2.29 lakh have been
given.
The waste thus collected will be taken to the Vellalore dump yard,
where the company will segregate and process the waste. The
non-biodegradables will be used as landfill at the site there.
The landfill process is expected to begin early next year and will go
on for 20 years – till the end of the contract between the civic body
and the company.