2 lakh kg waste submitted to clean Kerala Ltd – News2IN
Thiruvananthapuram

2 lakh kg waste submitted to clean Kerala Ltd

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Thiruvananthapuram: City Corporation who has to spend a lot of money and energy to clean the dump yard in various places has submitted 2 lakh kg of non-recycled inheritance waste, cannot be reused to clean the Kerala company that spends Rs 24.32 lakh.
In accordance with the numbers presented in the corporate board meeting held here on Tuesday, 2,04,430 kg of waste that cannot be recycled sorted by three dump yards in Putharakandam, Erumakuzhy and Atkakulang.
This is the first time City Corporation collects legacy waste from dump yards.
The number of legacy waste obtained from three dump yards reflects the economic and environmental impacts that increase from the use of materials that cannot be recycled in the city.
The Civic’s body has involved 40 workers collected from poor camps and migrant workers camp at SMV School and Attakulangan School as part of cleaning the dump yard in Erumakuzhy in 2020.
The tender is called bio-mining waste inheritance and the initial estimate runs above Rs 1 Crore for the entire project.
That’s when the tender process is stopped after the lock; Corporations think to attract people camping in school depends on their willingness.
The corporation estimates that more than 11,000 cubic meters of unthinkable waste have been stacked in Erumakuzhy and Pallayam over the past few years.
Dump Yard in Pallayam has been cleaned through bio-mining as part of the City City project.
It is estimated that there are about 9,684 cubic meters of legacy waste spread in 40 cents from the ground (0.4 hectares) in Pallayam.
The survey results prepared in 2020 showed that 2,388 cubic meters of waste had accumulated in Erumakuzhy.
The corporation recently signed an agreement with Clean Kerala Company for the remaining legacy waste collection of waste that could not be recycled that did not have a taker.
The agreement is carried out for the collection of thermocols and Rexin waste at Rs 10 per kg along with other types of waste such as leather, rubber sandals, bags, furniture, and plastic.
This previously stilted the processing of co-processes from plastic waste that could not be recycled and had tapped the possibility of alternative fuel supplies in the cement industry to handle non-recycled plastic waste which jumped.

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