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Solid Waste Management

TNPCB team finds site for waste management not suitable

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The Hindu 31.08.2009

TNPCB team finds site for waste management not suitable

Special Correspondent

CHENNAI: A three-member team of senior engineers of the Tamil Nadu Pollution Control Board has said that a nearly 65-acre site at Kuthambakkam, near Poonamallee, where a Solid Waste Management Facility is proposed, is not a suitable location for establishing the facility. This is because rainwater which collects in this area reaches the Chembarambakkam Lake, a major water source for Chennai.

The reports of the team were shown to the First Bench comprising the Chief Justice H.L. Gokhale and Justice D. Murugesan when petitions by S. Nandakumar and the Kuthambakkam Panchayat, represented by its president P.Geetha, challenging the setting up of the facility at the site, came up for further hearing. Earlier, in its interim order, the court had said that garbage should not be dumped on the disputed land until further orders.

Present order

In its present order, the Bench said notwithstanding the team’s report, it appeared that the Member-Secretary had issued a further communication dated October 2008 which was to the contrary and which permitted a compound wall to be constructed round the site wherein the treatment facility is to come up. In this state of affairs, the Bench said it was of the view that the pollution control board should file an affidavit explaining as to what was the correct position in this behalf and placing on record the report of the Municipal Solid Waste Monitoring team, the decision of the board and the Member-Secretary.

The Bench directed that no quarrying and any other construction activity, including construction of a compound wall, would be permitted on the disputed land until further orders. Grazing of animals would be permitted. Counsel for the pollution control board said a counter would be filed. The matter has been posted for September 2.

Last Updated on Monday, 31 August 2009 00:52
 

‘70,000 tonnes of garbage cleared'

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The New Indian Express 24.08.2009

‘70,000 tonnes of garbage cleared'

CHENNAI: The Adyar Poonga will be ready in another 15 months, after two years of work in and around Adyar lake, Joss Brooks, director of Pitchandikulam Bio-resource centre said here on Saturday while narrating his experiences in working on the Adyar Poonga.

He was speaking at the Seventh Samanvaya Freedom Lecture jointly organised by CIOSA on Gardening for Freedom held at Vidya Sagar (formerly Spastic society of India).

Screening images of the Adyar Poonga project, he explained how tedious and interesting the project was to transform desecrated mother nature into a garden.

“A year ago, Adyar poonga was dumped with garbage.

Even as we started our work, tonnes of rubble were dumped in the place overnight,” he recalled, as he displayed a picture.

The team that is working on the poonga eventually removed 70,000 tonnes of garbage and has been restoring it by planting saplings.

Joss and his team have also signed an agreement with the government to maintain the poonga for two years.

“A lot of IT companies including Infosys have been approaching us to create an ecofriendly atmosphere and it is their knowledge that is interesting,” continues Joss.

Joss, an Australian, now settled at Auroville has taken similar restoration of wetlands at Anna University pond and Otteri dumping ground.

“We have not used any cement to even make park benches and our objective is to restore bio diversity, not build concretes like you see in Anna Nagar park where they are still spending another Rs three crores,” he said.

He displayed images of similar situation, when he went to stay at Auroville and its transformation to a green environment. The Pitchandikulam bio-resource centre was started in 2003 in a government school known to be the worst in the State with less pass percentage. Since then, the students were involved with planting sapling in and around the school.

“Today, we have around 800 species of plants and 300 medicinal herbs besides having 2000 trees in the school,” he said.

Joss also displayed images of the greenery at various places he visited across the world including Tasmania, Ethiopia, Turkey, Thiruvannamalai and Himalayas. To him, bringing back a garden is bringing harmony to a sustainable life which is ultimate freedom and that can be achieved only if there is discipline among the public.

Last Updated on Monday, 24 August 2009 05:43
 

Kalam to inaugurate meeting on solid waste management

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The Hindu 29.07.2009

Kalam to inaugurate meeting on solid waste management

Special Correspondent


An exhibition will begin on August 12

Award for best paper by a student


COIMBATORE: Former President Abdul Kalam will inaugurate here on August 13 a conference on solid waste management organised by Anna University, Coimbatore and the National Solid Waste Association of India (NSWAI), Mumbai.

Union Minister of Environment and Forests Jairam Ramesh and the State Minister for Environment T.P.M. Mohideen Khan will deliver special address, a press release from the university’s Dean of Academic Campus S. Premchand said on Tuesday.

An exhibition on solid waste management would open on August 12. All models of waste management and equipment used would be on display. The exhibition would be on till August 14.

The organisers have invited paper presentations from researchers, practitioners of waste management, students and non-governmental organisations on the following topics: municipal solid waste, bio-medical waste, e-waste, industrial, hazardous and toxic waste. An award would be given to the best paper by a student.

While the university wants to highlight its emphasis on waste management through this meet, the Union Government had identified NSWAI as one of the centres for capacity-building projects of World Bank in urban municipal solid waste management.

Last Updated on Wednesday, 29 July 2009 11:20
 


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