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Solid Waste Management

Solid waste management authority mooted

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Source : The Hindu Date : 28.06.2009

Solid waste management authority mooted

Staff Reporter

THIRUVANANTHAPURAM: The former IAS official Philipose Thomas has mooted a solid waste management authority for better coordination between those involved in waste management and the local bodies.

Speaking at a seminar on solid waste management organised by New Media and the Global Forum for Disaster Reduction in the capital on Friday, Mr. Thomas suggested that the ideal way to overcome the problem was not to generate waste.

The former IAS official pointed out that 50 per cent of the waste generated in the country was paper. Making offices paperless and use of both sides of paper for writing would result in less wastage.

He also stressed the need for creating awareness among the public and the children to overcome the problem.

Associate vice-president, marketing and business development, JCB, Amit Gossain, called for the effective use of technology to overcome the problem. Machines should be effectively used and integrated solid waste management should be adopted.

Adopting 4 R’s - refuse, reduce, reuse and recycle - segregation of waste at source, creating awareness and including waste management in the curriculum were some of the steps mooted by him. “Public-private partnership in waste management will go a long way as the government cannot do it alone,” he added.

Vice-president of IL&FS Waste & Urban Services Ltd. Kapil Gupta said it was time to set scientific landfills in the country. “Those in the country are just dumping yards and they look like mountains.”

According to him, e-waste, bio-medical waste and construction and demolition waste will have to be addressed in the coming days.

The IL&FS, in association with Delhi Municipal Corporation, is setting up a 500-tonne construction and demolition waste plant, which is expected to commence functioning in August.

Director of Science Technology & Entrepreneurship Development Project Mohanan Manalil said 6,000 tonnes of waste was being generated daily in the five corporations, 53 municipalities and 999 panchayats in the State.

Last Updated on Sunday, 28 June 2009 12:36
 

Handle waste innovatively

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Source : The Hindu Date : 27.06.2009

Handle waste innovatively

Mythili G. Nirvan

Biogas plant can convert it into cooking gas

The Bruhat Bangalore Mahanagara Palike (BBMP) had issued a notification a few years ago informing all apartments with more than 100 flats and owners/associations of non-residential buildings with more than 10,000 sq. m. of built-up area to collect the garbage generated in their buildings and segregate it as biodegradable and non-biodegradable waste. Thereafter the segregated garbage shall be kept in one place within their premises and will be collected by the BBMP.

However, it is unfortunate that not all large apartment and commercial complexes follow this. Even if they do, few segregate the biodegradable from the non-biodegradable waste. Bangalore has run out of space for dumping garbage due to non-availability of landfills in the heart of the city. It is time that solid waste management systems were put in place to tackle this serious issue, particularly in hotels, tech parks, wedding halls and large residential and commercial complexes that generate large quantities of waste.

One of the innovative ways of waste management which has proved successful is to set up a biogas plant in the premises. It not only takes care of the waste, but converts it into cooking gas as well!

How it works

“A biogas plant can be set up by any large residential or commercial establishment. It works like this: when the waste is fed into the digester, anaerobic digestion of organic material by bacteria takes place inside. This process releases methane gas, which is collected in the biogas holder. From there, pipelines are drawn to the kitchen where it can be used for cooking,” explains Ramakumar P., Associate Vice-President, Enzen Global Solutions, an energy and environment consulting company. “The residues in the digestor move to the outlet tank which is a rich source of organic manure, and can be used for gardening.”

Proactive effort

The biogas way of waste management has been successfully implemented by the Velankani Tech Park in Electronics City where more than 4,500 employees work. “At Velankani, we were facing a challenge with waste food disposal at the canteen. Hence we mooted the proposal for alternative forms of using this resource for an internal application and address waste management issues. Utilising waste for a biogas application for the heating requirements in the canteen resulted in savings both in terms of waste disposal cost & LPG consumption,” explains V.S. Gangadhara Rao, Director, Velankani Renewable Energy Pvt Ltd.

“Presently, the waste per day averages about 150-180 kg. We save an average of Rs. 270 per day which is around Rs. 9,000 a month and around Rs. 1 lakh a year,” he adds.

However, there is a need for large-scale effort in this direction. “Segregation of waste must be made mandatory, especially in large residential and commercial complexes. The government could even consider giving incentives for initiatives like these, like it does for solar water heaters and rainwater harvesting,” suggests Mr. Ramakumar.

Last Updated on Saturday, 27 June 2009 06:24
 

Deadline for ban on plastic put off

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Source : The Hindu Date : 26.06.2009

Deadline for ban on plastic put off

Staff Reporter

PUDUCHERRY: Chief Minister V. Vaithilingam on Thursday evening said that the government had decided to put off the ban on plastic items in the Union Territory from July 1 to September 1. The delay in implementation was owing to administrative reasons, he told The Hindu.

Protest rally

Earlier in the day, plastic manufacturers and traders from all over Puducherry and Tamil Nadu came together to demand the withdrawal of the proposed ban on plastic.

Over 5,000 members of plastic manufacturers’ and traders’ associations took out a protest rally from the Anglo French Textiles Ground to the Assembly, where they presented a memorandum to Mr. Vaithilingam.

President of the All Puducherry Plastic Traders’ and Manufacturers’ Association (APPTMA) S. Babu said that the memorandum demanded implementation of the Municipal Solid Wastes Management Rules, 2000.

“We have also urged the government to provide us land to set up a central plastic recycling plant, that will prove to be viable and profitable to the government,” Mr. Babu said.

While only plastics of thickness below 20 microns were banned in other parts of India, Puducherry was planning to ban plastic items such as bags and cups irrespective of thickness.

“In the presence of the Recycled Plastics Manufacture and Usage (Amendment) Rules, 2003, of the Union government, a State-level ban on plastics is not necessary. There would be no plastic waste if the Municipal Solid Wastes Management Rules, 2000, were implemented,” he said.

Last Updated on Friday, 26 June 2009 12:05
 


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