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SOLID WASTE MANAGEMENT: ACHIEVING COMPLIANCE WITH MSW RULES Mrs Almitra H Patel, MS MIT Member, Supreme Court Committee For Solid Waste Management – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: SOLID WASTE MANAGEMENT: ACHIEVING COMPLIANCE WITH MSW RULES


1
SOLID WASTE MANAGEMENT ACHIEVING COMPLIANCE
WITH MSW RULES
  • Mrs Almitra H Patel, MS MIT
  • Member, Supreme Court Committee
  • For Solid Waste Management
  • almitrapatel_at_rediffmail.com

2
COMPLIANCE REQUIRES ONLY ADMINISTRATIVE
WILL !!!
  • Suryapet A P (pop. 1.03 lac) has Zero Waste
  • in the town or for ultimate disposal through
  • segregated door-to-door collection,
  • composting vermi and dry waste sorting,
  • all with OWN staff.
  • SEPARATE lifting of inerts (drain silt, debris).
  • NO Govt funds, citizen payment or NGOs.
  • SJSRY program for collection transport.

3
A COMPLETE ROAD MAP IS AVAILABLE SINCE 1999
  • It is in the Supreme Court Committee Report on
    SWM in Class I Cities.
  • (I can give reprints in English or a Hindi
    translation).
  • The MSW Rules 2000 are largely based on this but
    apply to ALL ULBs ( pop. over 20,000).

4
OBJECTIVES OF SWM 1
  • Keep waste off streets and drains !
  • Achieve a dustbin-free city through
  • Daily doorstep collection
  • Of Wet waste, for
  • Bio-stabilising (compost/vermi)
  • Preferably Decentralised, to
  • Prevent pollution outside ULBs.

5
TRANSPORT SAVINGS EASILY PAY FOR DECENTRALISED
BIO-BINS TO BIOCULTURE-TREAT WET WASTES
  • Replace open waste-points or dumper-placers or
  • street dustbins with covered bio-bins. Can be
  • paid for by free advertising rights to sponsors.
  • Kochi has 2 bio-bins of 6x3x2.5 high for every
  • 100 households, served by Kudumbashree
    self-help groups professional Waste Business.
  • Mumbais ALMs replaced street open dumps or
    dumper-placers with bio-bins and pretty plants.
    Biotreatment services by an NGO.

6
OBJECTIVES OF SWM 2
  • Separate Collection of Dry Waste (recyclables),
    weekly or fortnightly, preferably by Informal
    Sector. In each Ward, provide a space for daily
    purchase of PET bottles and other recyclables
    cash counter for ragpickers.
  • Working well in Bombay, Bangalore.
  • Also keeps drains clean through dustbin adoption
  • and drain adoption by rag-pickers Contact
  • Geetanjali Industries at jainj_at_rediffmail.com

7
SEPARATE COLLECTION OF INERTS DRAIN SILT, ROAD
DIGGINGS DUST, DEBRIS CONSTRUCTION WASTE
  • USE productively for plinth filling,
  • Improving road shoulders, embankments.
  • Hillside gully-plugging and check-dams to prevent
    mud runoff into town drains.
  • Ravine-filling is safe and nuisance-free.
  • Reward informants of night-dumping.
  • Make architects accountable for disposal.

8
OBJECTIVES OF SWM 3
  • NO BURNING of garbage or leaves.
  • NO PESTICIDE USE on garbage (S.Court
  • Order 28.7.1997 in WP 888/96).
  • Try Bio-cultures to control odour and flies.
  • Phenyle etc kills natural bio-degraders.
  • Separate collection of garden waste,
  • (compost locally), tree trimmings (for
  • local fuelwood use) dairy wastes (use as
    bioculture for waste stabilising).

9
HARDWARE REQUIRED
  • SMALL TOWNS Tractor-trailers for direct
  • door-to-door pick-up (e.g. Suryapet) but
  • TWIN COMPARTMENTS A MUST, if Wet
  • Dry wastes are collected at the same time.
  • MEDIUM TOWNS Tipper trucks stop along roads
    (e.g. Nasik) to receive waste directly from homes
    shops for onward transport to compost plant.

10
HARDWARE FOR LARGE CITIES
  • Door-to-door Primary Collection in handcarts,
  • tricycles or autorickshaws (e.g. Cochin), all
    with liftable buckets/bins. Push-frames with
    second-hand barrels are cheaper than
    wheelbarrows.
  • Dumper placers are least preferred option
    Invites filth all around, covers missing.
  • Attracts cows, dogs, street waste-picking/spills.
  • Corpus Fund is a MUST for their costly repair and
    replacement. (Paint inside bottoms with molten
    tar for corrosion resistance). Ditto for Street
    Sweeping machines, or system collapses.

11
MICRO-PLANNING REQUIRED
  • Wardwise Parking Spaces for tools Primary
    Collection vehicles.
  • GOOD Scheduling Time Managemt
  • for unloading Primary Collection vehicles
  • directly into secondary transport, to
  • avoid unloading any waste onto any
  • public space even briefly.

12
MANAGEMENT INFORMATION SYSTEMS
  • DAILY Reporting, DAILY Analysis and
  • DAILY CORRECTIVE ACTION on
  • SKs on duty
  • Vehicles on road, number time of trips
  • Waste quantity collected, areawise. Paymt by
    weight invites mixing of heavy inerts, stones.
    Payment by volume is far better, saves cost.
  • When Where Unloaded on-site staff a must !
  • Chennai Vizag are good models for MIS

13
MODEL NOTIFICATIONS under MSW Rules Sch II (3)
  • MERA AANGAN SAAF for flood control through
    spotless drains
  • Every ground-floor occupier/owner (esp. in
    commercial areas) must ensure cleanliness of
    drain adjoining their property, including upto
    centre of road. Also service lanes if any.
  • Polluter Pays charges for all Trade waste
  • (hotels, hostels, shaadi baghs, shops, offices,
  • banks, colleges, dairies) at SWM Cost (Indexed)

14
KEEP CONSTRUCTION WASTE OFF THE ROADS
  • Notify monthly collection drives e.g. Ward 1
    every 1st of the month
  • Collect SEPARATELY surplus Sand, Stone, Bricks
    found on roads on that date without special
    permission, and stock for repair of schools etc.
  • Sand must always be contained in a ring of bricks
  • to prevent vehicles spreading / spilling it into
    drains.
  • All raw mtl must be INSIDE plot after first
    centering is removed, otherwise daily cleaning
    charges.

15
TAKE-BACK RULES FOR HAZ WASTE
  • Tubelights and fluorescents are worst. Sellers
    must take back for safe disposal. Also for those
    purchased for streetlights.
  • Compulsory take-back by sellers or distributors
    of aerosol cans, esp of insecticides and
    pesticides.
  • How can cities exercise such powers?

16
MONTHLY COLLECTION OF DOMESTIC HAZARDOUS
WASTES
  • Notify fixed day of month for pickup of Button
    Cells from shops for cameras, cell-phones,
    electricals, watches.
  • Batteries drop-off at convenient stores. If no
    safe recycling, can immobilise in concrete
    block-making plants.
  • Enforce Biomed Rules. Collect Sharps from
    clinics on notified schedule.

17
NOTIFY ENFORCE BUFFER ZONE AROUND WASTE
PROCESSING SITES
  • Approved sites are precious as resistance to
    sites outside city limits is very strong.
  • Involve locals in an Advisory Committee from Day
    One and keep them informed.
  • Host Village MUST BENEFIT collectively give
    roads, buses, more power or water,
    school/hospital transit toll per garbage truck?
  • Give 1 ton free compost per head per year or
    season to ensure good quality is produced without
    objections. REMOVE REJECTS !!

18
NO WASTE TO ENERGY SCHEMES !
  • SAARCs Dhaka Declaration 2004 has resolved that
    burn technologies shall not be an option for
    urban solid waste.
  • Supreme Court has frozen further funding for WTE
    in view of massive failures.
  • Only SMALL biometh use on-site succeeds.
  • Rajasthan needs to conserve ALL of its precious
    biomass thru Stabilisation.

19
WHY NO RDF WASTE-TO-ENERGY ?
  • UNVIABLE Our Indian waste has only 800-1000
    kcal/kg, vs 3600 reqd. Energy is lost in
    evaporating moisture, heating large ash sand
    content, so no surplus energy available.
  • So Hyd Vijayawada use 90 paddy-husk,
  • while municipal waste, accepted to get subsidy,
  • piles up in stinking heaps around both plants.
  • DANGEROUS RDF from mixed Indian waste
  • produces Dioxin on burning from PVC in film,
  • packaging, labels, bottle caps, vinyl, tubes.

20
WHAT ABOUT BIOMETHANATION?
  • IMPOSSIBLE WITH HIGH INERTS. Cant run a
    gobar-gas plant on 45 mud ! Never consider
    unless a city has 12-month record of separate
    collection and max 5-10 drain silt, road
    sweepings.
  • SUCCESSFUL ON MICRO SCALE where biogas from
    canteen waste is used on-site in kitchen, not for
    power (max 30 efficiency of converting heat to
    power).

21
COMPOSTING SAVES ENERGY TOO
  • Urea production needs both costly naptha and
    factory power to produce it.
  • City compost use can save 50 of normal urea
    dose, and gives 15 higher yield with 30 less
    water need and less pesticides. But demand is v
    seasonal.
  • Biological processing for stabilisation of
    biodegradable wastes is mandatory.
  • Sieving it to sell as compost is not a must.

22
BIOSTABILISED URBAN WASTE CAN WORK WONDERS
FOR RAJASTHAN
  • Use it to vegetate stabilise moving sand-dunes,
    for wind-breaks and erosion control, and
    mandatory revegetation of mining spoils.
  • Improve fertility productivity of sandy soil.
  • Retain soil moisture and reduce irrigation water
    needs and fights over water.
  • Let Indias most popular Tourist State become
    also Indias first Model State for cleanliness.

23
DO NOT WAIT FOR PERFECT SOLUTIONS!
  • STOP landfilling of mixed waste at once!
  • Stop dozing levelling untreated wastes.
  • In the same spot, unload waste in rows, use JCB
    to form wind-rows (long heaps) and spray with
    composting bio-cultures or inoculums. This
    reduces volume fast, controls odour and flies,
    and offensive leachate formation.
  • Heap gets very warm, this kills pathogens.

24
IMPROVE EXISTING DUMPS/LANDFILLS
  • The idea is to keep rainwater out and prevent it
    percolating through waste.
  • Shape the area into a smooth convex pile with
    very gentle slope. No depressions where water can
    collect and seep in.
  • On sloping ground, have a diversion trench uphill
    (like army tents) to keep out water.
  • On lower side, have a collection trench and pit
    to collect runoff. RECIRCULATE LEACHATE onto the
    warm heap, to get clean water vapour. Solids are
    left behind in the stabilised waste.
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