Gurgaon: The corporation of the city of Gurgaon (MCG) will begin to collect a collection of waste from Thursday.
To implement it effectively at the ground, he also had to overcome some infrastructure challenges such as obtaining a compartment vehicle to collect separate waste and dig a composting hole to process wet waste, activists said.
MCG officials say they will not collect garbage from households if they are not separated on sources to be dry, wet and dangerous waste.
The corporation will also ensure that the collection vehicle has a separate compartment in 10 days, they said.
On Wednesday, MCG confiscated two vehicles that did not have a compartment.
“Even though infrastructure remains a challenge, we will simultaneously work on it while collecting separate waste.
I have instructed the horticulture department to make a composting hole in the park so we have enough facilities for wet waste processing.
We have also instructed the waste collector to keep home notes The stairs that do not provide separate waste, so we can punish them, “said the additional commissioner MCG Vaishali Sharma.
Activists, however, said this city requires infrastructure to support separate waste processing.
“For example, in Bangalore, each ward has a dry waste collection center that only takes dry waste and does the secondary segregation and waste disposal that cannot be recycled properly.
In addition, Gurgaon does not have facilities for processing wet waste at the environmental level.
Each of the 35 wards in Gurgaon must have composting facilities and or bio-methane provisions must be based on recovery, not disposal, “said Ruchika Sethi Takkar, the founder of why waste your waste, citizen initiatives.
Meanwhile, the concession holder of ecogreen waste management said they had 347 vehicles to collect garbage, including around 302 vehicles have partitions.
“We conducted a training session for drivers, supervisors, the MCG sanitation team and other workers involved in the process of gathering waste on Wednesday.
There are two aspects of the training – one is to train them to ensure they collect and transport separate waste and the other is to train them for Convincing people to separate their waste to the source, “said Deputy CEO of Ecogreen Sanjay Sharma.
“Our staff will also coordinate with MCG and give them information about households that do not separate waste,” he added.
For commercial units, ecogreen officials said they had sent separate vehicles to collect dry and wet waste because the amount of waste produced was very large.
There are three ways to collect different waste in household staff who collect waste in the name of Rwas, the ecogreen sub-vendor collects through a collection of workers and crackdown in semi-urban areas.
Residents said that while the MCG enforcement team could implement waste separation in the area where he gathered waste, it must ensure separation in areas where the community and the Rwas collected waste as well.
“Also, Ecogreen payment terms are based on the tip and beneficial cost model for them to collect mixed waste.
There is no penalty for collecting and transporting mixed waste, which needs to change to implement the separation of waste,” said Sector 10A residents.