ENVIRONMENTAL%20LAW%20FOR%20URBAN%20MANAGEMENT - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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ENVIRONMENTAL%20LAW%20FOR%20URBAN%20MANAGEMENT

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Title: ENVIRONMENTAL%20LAW%20FOR%20URBAN%20MANAGEMENT


1
ENVIRONMENTAL LAW FOR URBAN MANAGEMENT
  • Almitra H Patel,
  • Member, Supreme Court Committee for SWM in Class
    1 Cities
  • 50 Kothnur, Bagalur Rd, Bangalore 560077
  • almitrapatel_at_rediffmail.com

2
WASTE IS WEALTH
  • Since Vedic times, food wastes
  • returned to the soil for sustainable
  • farming. The plastic yug and urea
  • subsidies have destroyed this cycle.
  • Villages around cities suffer horrific
  • waste dumps, dogs, flies, smoke
  • stench but feel helpless to protest.

3
WHY A PIL FOR SWM ?
  • Bangalore began dumping its waste
  • randomly on its beautiful outskirts for
  • want of official waste-disposal sites.
  • Capt Velu and I found this the case all
  • over India, during our 100-city Clean
  • India Campaigns by road in 1994 95.

4
WP 888/96 in SUPREME COURT
  • Filed against every State and U.T.
  • GoI, CPCB, 10 worst and 4 best cities.
  • 1998 SC 8-member Committee formed
  • and Interim Report presented to 400
  • municipal officials, on all aspects.
  • 1999 Final Report approved by all 300 Class 1
    Cities in mini-referendum
  • 2000 MSW Mgt Handling Rules

5
MSW Rules 2000
  • Apply to all ULBs, pop over 20,000
  • Mandatory to set up waste processing and disposal
    facilities by 31.12.2003
  • Supreme Court will soon send case to
  • every State High Court for monitoring
  • ULBs compliance with these Rules.
  • Citizens can approach the Amicus for
  • redressal of citys non-performance.

6
Key Recommendations
  • Keep Wet and Dry wastes unmixed
  • at source until collected at fixed time.
  • Daily doorstep collection of wet waste
  • for Composting. Landfill only rejects.
  • Dry wastes left to informal recyclers.
  • City must not mix any debris (malba), drain silt
    or road dust in garbage collection. Use 2nd
    shift trip if reqd.

7
THE BEST WAY TO KEEP STREETS CLEAN IS NOT TO
DIRTY THEMAIM FOR BIN-LESS CITIES
  • Calcutta uses its normal handcarts staff
  • at no extra charge to citizens.
  • 80 cooperation in residential areas.
  • Nasik loads directly from homes into tipper
    trucks, to handle waste once only.
  • Most cities use 4-6-bucket handcarts.

8
EXISTING MPL ACTS ARE GOOD ENOUGH
  • No additional legislation is reqd, as
  • SR Rao showed with Additional
  • Cleaning Charges in Surat, or Mumbai
  • does for Apartments wet-waste only.
  • Bangalores official policy is for wet-
  • dry collection in separate bins in cart

9
SCHOOL KIDS CLEANED UP COORG DISTRICT
  • They bring all thin-plastic waste from home to
    school one day a week.
  • A waste-buyer visits schools weekly.
  • Funds are collected class-wise and
  • Used at end of term for Eco-Clubs.
  • Parents cooperate wonderfully !

10
RECYCLING of DRY WASTES NEEDS HELP
  • SEWA Ahmedabad is best, all-India
  • SNDT Pune has rag-pickers Union
  • PCMC provides waste-sorting and storage space,
    eqpt at dump to recycle plastic by Mahila Sangha
  • Mumbai gives PET collection space

11
ENCOURAGE RECYCLING THRU PROACTIVE POLICIES
  • Provide waste-sorting storing spaces.
  •  
  • Promote eco-parks with quality power and soft
    loans for pollution control eqpt, to bring
    recyclers into the mainstream.
  •  
  • Change PWD codes and specifications to include
    beneficial new technologies like
    waste-plastic-modified bitumen roads and fly-ash
    use in bricks, embankments and highways.

12
START by CLEANING SLUMS
  • A City is only as clean as its Dirtiest Areas.
  • Slums are the easiest to clean and the most
    cooperative.
  • Mumbai uses take-away bins in Slum Adoption
    Schemes.
  • Blore has trucks stop at gate.

13
MINIMISE WASTES !
  • Mumbai ALMs reduce wastes by 90
  • Spraying Delhis dalao with bioculture
  • reduced monthly clearance trips from
  • 30 to just 6 ! Savings pay for treatment
  • Campus-composting services are in.
  • Require this for all large public spaces
  • Hotel wastes go to Food Banks or pigs

14
COMMERCIAL AREAS COOPERATE THE LEAST
  • Charge them Polluter-Pays user
  • fees and modify the cleaning hours.
  • Require each ground-flr shop/office
  • to keep its frontage-width clean
  • including pavement drain.
  • New By-laws may be needed for this.

15
DEBRIS MANAGEMENT
  • Dumped on streets or vacant plots at night
  • May need new Bylaws for Fines after Notice
  • or walls around vacant plots (Rajkot) or
  • clearance on payment (Chennai, Ghaziabad).
  • Collect volume-based deposit on Plan-Sanction
  • Start Debris Hot-line to link buyers producers.
  • Bldg materials must move on-site below 1st slab
  • or confiscate collect separately for citys
    use.

16
PLAN for CLEAN CITIES
  • when adding Wards or planning Layouts
  • Parking and washing space for handcarts
  • Dry-Waste sorting and storage spaces
  • Parking for take-away trucks at markets
  • Hospital-waste-management sites / space
  • Debris exchanges,waste-for-fuel or feed.

17
ZONING PLANS
  • Move livestock out to planned zones before adding
    or developing new areas
  • Plan dispersed space for Hawking Zones
  • Zones for migrant construction labour, and plan
    for those who will stay back.
  • Affordable Housing Zoning for slum-free cities,
    with sites-and-services.

18
REGULATIONS FOR CLEAN CITIES
  • Sale Deeds to have clauses for
  • Not mixing wet and dry wastes
  • Rainwater-harvesting, groundwater recharge
  • Common toilets water in pvt societies
    temporary toilets during construction
  • Cleanliness of frontages till road centre if any
    ground-floor offices or shops.

19
SPECIAL ROLE OF DEVLPMT AUTHORITIES
  • Avoid unserved Twilight Zones
  • Waste clearance from Day One by DA or private
    agents, with user fees and Polluter-Pays for
    trade-wastes.
  • AVOID unsustainable NGO Pilot projects that seek
    capital operating funds !
  • Give area to ULB when 50 occupied.

20
SITES FOR WASTE MGT
  • MSW Rules Sch III 1. asks Development
  • Authorities to identify and hand over
  • sites to ULBState UD Dept to coordinate.
  • Dont just look for available Revenue land.
  • Identify the most suitable site, then
  • lease, buy or acquire it at market rates.

21
Waste - processing disposal sites lie mostly
out side ULB limits always face NIMBY
resistance
  • So there must always be advance
  • involvement of local residents in an
  • advisory committee, plus Polluter Pays
  • compensation to the host Panchayat or
  • Ward by the ULB or State by way of
  • better infrastructure, facilities, payment.

22
NEVER start open-dumping of waste in a
proposed waste - processing site !
  • No matter how desperate the need for space,
    do it right or not at all.
  •  
  • Ground - water can be polluted in one
  • downpour, and take 15 years to clean up.
  •  
  • Waste stabilisation in windrows
  • is quick, easy inexpensive (Pune,Blr)
  • using EM. Powerpoint available.

23
Urgently declare the mandatory Buffer Zones of
No-New-Development around existing and
identified waste-processing disposal sites.
  •  When new homes, schools and industries
  • spring up around such once - ideal sites,
  • protests for shifting of the compost plant
  • begin even before it can come up,
  • supported by the unplanned-builder lobby.

24
Proceed aggressively to compost all city wastes
  • and thus meet Indias annual shortfall of
  • 6 million tons of organic manures to
  •   drought-proof our dry-land agriculture,
  •   reclaim our degraded soils,
  • revegetate mining overburdens,
  •  
  • reduce pollution of peri-urban areas.

25
State Agriculture and Fertiliser Ministries
should prepare a joint Action Plan
  • to ensure locally available and affordable
    city
  • compost use along with chemical
    fertilizers.
  • Combined use ensures three times better
  • uptake of urea by crops and prevents nitrate
  • pollution of ground-water by unbalanced over-
  • use of urea or Nitrogenous fertilisers
  • Such Integrated Plant Nutrient Management
  • ( IPNM ) gives excellent yields without
  • depleting soil quality over time.

26
Avoid seeking free Waste-To-Energy (WTE)
options which never work
  • 33 feasibility reports 17 MOUs over 5
  • years not a single working WTE plant,
  • several scams, 2 convictions and a
  • pretence at pelletisation.
  • There are no free BOOT schemes.
  • The public pays the hidden penalties for
    quality, quantity counter-guarantees

27
WTE costs 13 times more for waste processing and
3-9 times more for power!
  • e.g. Lucknows Rs 65 crores for 125 tons a day
    and an impossible 5 MW, with 15 cr subsidy from
    MNES.
  • A 125 tpd compost plant costs 5crore.
  • One MW conventional power costs 4-6 crores for
    thermal or hydel energy

28
ENGINEERED LANDFILLS
  • Specified in MSW Rules for all, to prevent
    leachate from undigested waste or rainfall on
    wastes from entering ground-water.
  • A good one at Pune costs Rs 2 cr for 600tpd for
    2-3 yrs life. There is also one at Nasik.
  • Fully lined landfills are not really reqd for v v
    small towns or in very dry areas.
  • ??? May seek case-by-case exemption from SPCB for
    these locations, taking care to collect domestic
    haz-wastes separately.

29
ADMINISTRATIVE REFORM FOR CLEAN CITIES
  • Running a city efficiently and keeping
  • it clean every day requires exceptional
  • skills, commitment and dedication at all
  • levels.
  •  
  • Administrative reforms can help create
  • an improved working climate for this.

30
Train tomorrows City Managers today, for
tomorrows urban problems and solutions.
  • Use the skills of our Navaratna City Managers
    (Indias unsung heroes) as trainers in our IAS
    Academies.
  • Both IAS Public Service Commission curricula
    need full-scale courses on waste mgt. Also
    training programs in SWM issues for new
    Corporators.

31
Appoint City Managers on 2-3-year fixed-term
contracts to ensure peak results.
  • Cities, like Companies need annual, three-year
    and ten-year plans and a Perform-or-Perish work
    culture.
  •  
  • Frequent transfers at whim at a days notice
    play havoc with effective planning, execution
    and morale, and the cost of failed long-term
    planning is incalculable.

32
Replace a culture of mistrust with a culture
of faith
  • Each person assigned any responsibility
  • should automatically have some financial
  • authority to go with the respective post, eg
  • 1 Days salary as automatic discretionary
    imprest allowance for Class 3 staff,
  • 1 Wks pay to Cl. 2 staff for stitch-in-time
    action
  • 1 Months salary as imprest for Class 1
    officers
  •  Delegation of fiscal powers will make a
  • huge difference to grievance redressal,
  • on-road efficiency, productivity costs.

33
The interests of the few must never over-ride the
interests of the many Be up - front about
Labor Reform 
  • The poorest always suffer the most from
  • uncleaned cities creeping privatisation
  • thru recruitment freezes while cities grow.
  • Triple the job openings in SWM by
  • exempting waste mgt services from the
  • Contract Labour Act, and privatise as much
  • of city area as staff shortage . Eg A.P.

34
Strengthen city finances
  • Allow City Managers and/or elected bodies their
    74th Amendment autonomy to raise resources in
    their respective ways with-out requiring State
    Govt assent for this.
  •  
  • Index all items of city income annually to
    the cost-of-living index to stay in tune with
    reality.
  • This avoids the populist deferment of needed
    increases till after elections. All political
    parties can act in the name of such blanket
    rules.

35
Promote public-pvt partnership
  • Ensure credible payment mechanisms thru
  • fool-proof payment guarantees through
  • Banks. If payments, agreements or grants
  • are delayed, parties will simply run away.
  •  
  • Avoid unrealistic demands for waste-
  • processors to bear waste-transport costs
  • or pay royalties. Hygienic waste
  • processing and disposal is a social cost,
  • easily met by more disciplined waste-
  • collection that excludes debris and silt.

36
Enforce Producer Responsibility
  • Cities are banning Paan Paraag etc.
  • Similarly require take-back schemes, esp of
    wasteful or hard-to-recycle packaging.
  • Require take-back of PET bottles at producers
    cost, not cities and citizens.
  • New industries here must conform to their
    home-country environmental standards.
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