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Landfill

Privatisation - A formula for provision or perversion of Municipal Solid Waste Management?

MSWMThis paper by Brooks Anderson of Clear Impression Documentation Services reviews the history, theory and outcomes of public service privatisation in order to weigh its merit and foresee the impact privatisation is likely to have on municipal solid waste management (MSWM) and thereby upon public welfare in India.

In 2000, in response to a Supreme Court order, the Government of India formulated and enacted the Municipal Solid Wastes (Management and Handling) Rules (hereafter referred to as the Rules) to mitigate a burgeoning solid waste crisis. Pollution from haphazard municipal solid waste disposal was gravely jeopardizing public health, thereby undermining the nation’s development gains.

The Rules’ prime objective was to protect public health and the environment by minimizing disposal of waste in landfills, thereby aligning the government’s municipal waste management policy with its commitments to international treaties to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, control the production of persistent organic pollutants, conserve finite resources, and achieve broad development targets.

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Privatisation - A formula for provision or perversion of Municipal Solid Waste Management? (2011)2.11 MB

Location

Chennai, TN, India
Latitude: 13.060422, Longitude: 80.249583

Successful innovations in solid waste management systems: Examples from five local bodies in Tamil Nadu

Innovations in Solid Waste Management Systems - Tamil NaduThis booklet about the work of Exnora Green Pammal (EGP), produced by UNICEF and published by the Government of Tamil Nadu,  illustrates examples of the implementation and impact of solid waste management innovations in five localities in Tamil Nadu. The solid waste management systems in these localities are widely regarded as successes that deserve replication.This document has been produced to inspire and enable more local body authorities to emulate such successes in other parts of the country.Read More

Improving solid waste management services in India is an urgent challenge for all levels of the government. Littering and the indiscriminate disposal of solid waste are widely practiced, polluting India's air, water, soil and inhabitants. Such pollution impedes India's efforts to achieve the Millennium Development Goals (MDG).The nation's measures to combat malaria and other diseases (MDG 6), reduce child mortality (MDG 4), and ensure environmental sustainability (MDG 7) are all hampered by the unsightly and unhygienic conditions created by the accumulation of waste.

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Solid Waste Management - Successful innovations - Examples from five local bodies - Tamil Nadu - EGP, UNICEF, Govt of TN (2010)1.15 MB
Solid Waste Management - Successful innovations - Examples from five local bodies -Tamil Nadu - EGP, UNICEF, Govt of TN - Tamil version (2010)2.66 MB

Manual on municipal solid waste management - CPHEEO (MoUD)

This manual has been developed by the Central Public Health and Environmental Engineering Organisation (CPHEEO), a department under the Ministry of Urban Development and aims at assisting the policy & decision makers, planners, managers and technical personnel involved in solid waste management activities, in safe and hygienic handling & disposal of municipal solid waste generated in the urban areas in India.Read More

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Manual on municipal solid waste management - CPHEEO - Ministry of Urban Development (2000)1.74 MB

Hydrological considerations for landfill and waste disposal sites – A research report by National Institute of Hydrology

The report details out the status of landfill and waste disposal technologies in India & abroad and reviews the scientific studies undertaken to support its design for long-lasting performance. Hydrological considerations play a major role in the selection of landfill sites and in the design and performance of landfills for hazardous waste management. A landfill is a form of a biochemical reactor where the municipal solid waste (MSW) comes into contact with moisture, a catalyst, and gets decomposed into solid waste, gases and liquid contaminants (leachate) resulting in the release of heat. The design of the control and recovery systems requires the estimation of amount and composition of gas and leachate accurately, as also the changes in these with time. Lysimeters are used to simulate the landfill performance.Read More

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Hydrological considerations for landfill and waste disposal sites by NIH (2000-01)1.72 MB

Land shaping promotes crop irrigation and prevents water stagnation in Sunderbans, West Bengal: The Ramkrishna Mission Experience

The low-lying area of the Sundarbans in West Bengal is well-known for frequent floods and cyclones. Water stagnates from June-July and remains muddy upto December making it impossible to grow any crop except the low yielding variety. Ramakrishna Mission Lokasiksha Parishad (RKMLSP) undertook a unique project of Land Shaping wherein a part of the land is raised artificially. Read More

Location

Kolkata, WB, India
Latitude: 22.637842, Longitude: 88.347473

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