Sustainable Solid Waste Management in India - Final

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The key takeaways are that improper solid waste management in urban India is a major problem that affects public health and the environment. Various systems like recycling, composting, and waste-to-energy are discussed as potential solutions.

The present status of waste management in India involves open dumping of solid wastes which affects public health and the environment. The author examined this issue and its effects through field visits and literature research.

The systems and techniques discussed for disposing municipal solid waste in India are informal and formal recycling, aerobic composting, mechanical biological treatment, small scale biomethanation, refuse derived fuel, and waste-to-energy combustion.

Open dumping of solid wastes in India

Sustainable Solid Waste Management in India


by

Ranjith Kharvel Annepu


Advisor: Nickolas J. Themelis Stanley-Thompson Professor Emeritus
Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Science in Earth Resources Engineering Department of Earth and Environmental Engineering Fu Foundation School of Engineering and Applied Science Columbia University in the City of New York

January 10, 2012 Sponsored by the


Waste-to-Energy Research and Technology Council (WTERT)

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EXECUTIVE SUMMARY

This study examined the present status of waste management in India, its effects on public health and the environment, and the prospects of introducing improved means of disposing municipal solid waste (MSW) in India. The systems and techniques discussed are Informal and Formal Recycling, Aerobic Composting and Mechanical Biological Treatment, Small Scale Biomethanation, Refuse Derived Fuel (RDF), Waste-to-Energy Combustion (WTE), and Landfill Mining (or Bioremediation). This report is the result of over two years of research and includes data collected from the literature, communication with professionals in India, US and Europe; and extensive field investigations by the author in India and the US. Two field visits in India over a period of fifteen weeks covered 13 cities (Figure 1) representing all sizes and regions in India. The visits included travelling to informal recycling hubs, waste dealers shops, composting facilities, RDF facilities, WTE facilities, sanitary and unsanitary landfills, landfill mining sites, and numerous municipal offices. These visits provided the opportunity to closely observe the impact of waste management initiatives, or lack thereof, on the public in those cities. The author has also visited different WTE plants in the US to study the prospects of this technology in India. The main objective of the study was to find ways in which the enormous quantity of solid wastes currently disposed off on land can be reduced by recovering materials and energy from wastes, in a cost effective and environmental friendly manner. The guiding principle of this study is that responsible management of wastes must be based on science and best available technology and not on ideology and economics that exclude environmental costs and seem to be inexpensive now, but can be very costly in the future (Annexure I). Lack of data and inconsistency in existing data is a major hurdle while studying developing nations. This report attempted to fill this gap by tabulating the per capita waste generation rates and wastes generated in 366 Indian cities that in total represent 70% of Indias urban population (Appendix 1). This is the largest existing database for waste generation in individual cities in India. Estimations made by extrapolating this data puts the total MSW generated in urban India at 68.8 million tons per year (TPY) or 188,500 tons per day (TPD). The data collected indicate a 50% increase in MSW generated within a decade since 2001. In a business as usual scenario, urban India will generate 160.5 million TPY (440,000 TPD) by 2041 (Table 7); in the next decade, urban India will generate a total of 920 million tons of municipal solid waste that needs to be properly managed in order to avoid further deterioration of public health, air, water and land resources, and the quality of life in Indian cities. In a business as usual scenario, India will not be able to dispose these wastes properly.

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Map of India Cities Generating MSW > 1000 TPD Cities Visited During Research Trip

Figure 1, Map of Cities Generating Different Quantities of MSW; Cities Visited by the Author during Research Visits

The composition of urban MSW in India is 51% organics, 17.5% recyclables (paper, plastic, metal, and glass) and 31 % of inerts (Table 6). The moisture content of urban MSW is 47% and the average calorific value is 7.3 MJ/kg (1745 kcal/kg). The composition of MSW in the North, East, South and Western regions of the country varied between 50-57% of organics, 16-19% of recyclables, 28-31% of inerts and 45-51% of moisture (Table 6). The calorific value of the waste varied between 6.8-9.8 MJ/kg (1,620-2,340 kcal/kg).

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This report has also updated the Status of Cities and State Capitals in Implementation of MSW (Management and Handling) Rules, 2000 (1), jointly published by the Central Pollution Control Board (CPCB) and the National Environmental Engineering Research Institute (NEERI), with respect to waste disposal options. The updated information is included as a table comparing the waste handling techniques in 2008 and 2011 (Table 9, also see Appendix 3). Since 2008, the number of composting facilities in the 74 cities studied (Appendix 3) increased from 22 to 40. Currently, India has more than 80 composting plants (Appendix 8). During the same period, the number of sanitary landfills (SLF) has increased from 1 to 8 while the number of RDF and WTE projects has increased from 1 to 7 (Appendix 3). The study also found that open burning of solid wastes and landfill fires emit nearly 22,000 tons per year of pollutants into the air in the city of Mumbai alone ( Figure 15). These pollutants include Carbon Monoxide (CO), Hydrocarbons (HC), Particulate Matter (PM), Nitrogen Oxides (NOx) and Sulfur Dioxide (SO2) plus an estimated 10,000 TEQ grams of dioxins/furans (Appendix 14). Open burning was found to be the largest polluter in Mumbai, among the activities that do not contribute any economic value to the city. Since open burning happens at ground level, the resultant emissions enter the lower level breathing zone of the atmosphere, increasing direct exposure to humans. The author has observed that the role of the informal sector in SWM in developing nations is increasingly being recognized. There is a world-wide consensus that the informal sector should be integrated into the formal system and there are numerous initiatives working with such goals. This report estimates that, every ton per day of recyclables collected informally saves the urban local body USD 500 (INR 24,500) per year and avoids the emission of 721 kg of carbon dioxide per year (Appendix 11). There is no sufficient information on the performance of Indias MSW composting facilities. However, an important observation made during this study is that the compost yield from mixed waste composting facilities (MBTs) is only 6-7% of the feed material. Up to 60% of the input waste is discarded as composting rejects and landfilled (Figure 28); the rest consists of water vapor and carbon dioxide generated during the composting processes. The compost product from mixed wastes was found to be of very low quality and contaminated by heavy metals (Figure 30). The majority of the mixed waste compost samples fell below the quality control standards for total potassium, total organic carbon, total phosphorus and moisture content; and exceeded the quality control limits for heavy metals (lead, Pb, and chromium, Cr). If all MSW generated in India in the next decade were to be composted as mixed waste and used for agriculture, it would introduce 73,000 tons of heavy metals into agricultural soils (Appendix 13).

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This study also found that the calorific value (lower heating value) of some composting rejects (up to 60% of the input MSW) is as high as 11.6 MJ/kg (2,770 kcal/kg) ( Table 14). This value is much higher than the minimum calorific value of 7.5 MJ/kg (1,790 kcal/kg) recommended for economically feasible energy generation through grate combustion WTE (2). This data is important, considering the notion that the calorific value of MSW in India is not suitable for energy generation. Therefore, the residues of mixed MSW composting operations can be used for producing RDF or can be combusted in a WTE plant directly. Landfill gas (LFG) recovery has been shown to be economically feasible at seven landfills located in four cities, Delhi, Mumbai, Kolkata and Ahmadabad (Table 10). Development of these seven LFG recovery projects will result in an overall GHG emissions reduction of 7.4 million tons of CO2 equivalents. One of these landfills, the Gorai dumpsite in Mumbai, has already been capped in 2008 for capturing and flaring LFG. This project will result in an overall GHG emissions reduction of 2.2 million tons of CO2 equivalents by 2028. Assuming a business as usual scenario (BAU), by the end of the next decade, India will generate a total of 920 million tons of MSW, landfill or openly dump 840 million tons of it and produce 3.6 million tons of mixed waste compost. It will also produce 33.1 million TPY of potential refuse derived fuel (RDF) in the form of composting rejects that will also be landfilled. A review of the present status of SWM in India, from a materials and energy recovery perspective, showed that in 2011 India will landfill (Appendix 15) 6.7 million TPY of recyclable material which could have been used as secondary raw materials in manufacturing industries, due to the absence of source separation; 9.6 million tons of compost which could have been used as a fertilizer supplement, due to the absence of source separation and enough composting facilities; and 58 million barrels of oil energy equivalent in residues of composting operations that could have been used to generate electricity and displace fossil fuels in RDF cocombustion plants or WTE power plants; due to the absence of WTE facilities, and proper policies and pollution control regulations for co-combustion of MSW in solid fuel industries. This report proposes a waste disposal system which includes integrated informal recycling, small scale biomethanation, MBT and RDF/WTE. Informal recycling can be integrated into the formal system by training and employing waste pickers to conduct door-to-door collection of wastes, and by allowing them to sell the recyclables they collected. Waste pickers should also be employed at material recovery facilities (or MRFs) to increase the percentage of recycling. Single households, restaurants, food courts Page | 6

and other sources of separated organic waste should be encouraged to employ small scale biomethanation and use the biogas for cooking purposes. Use of compost product from mixed wastes for agriculture should be regulated. It should be used for gardening purposes only or as landfill cover. Rejects from the composting facility should be combusted in a waste-to-energy facility to recover energy. Ash from WTE facilities should be used to make bricks or should be contained in a sanitary landfill facility. Such a system will divert 93.5% of MSW from landfilling, and increase the life span of a landfill from 20 years to 300 years. It will also decrease disease, improve the quality of life of urban Indians, and avoid environmental pollution.

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ACKNOWLEDGMENT

This report would not have been possible without the enormous patience, support and freedom provided by Professor Nickolas Themelis. His constant encouragement inspired me to remain unbiased and motivated; helping me discover the importance of this subject and in defining my role in this journey. He entrusted me with the responsibility of setting up WTERT India and provided ample opportunities to showcase my research. Mr. D.B.S.S.R. Sastry also played an important role by introducing me to many of his contacts, allowing me to explore the largely unchartered waters of research on solid waste management in India. He provided important data such as the calorific value of composting rejects from Indian MSW; published for the first time in this report. He explained that in the present context of India, energy generation from MSW is imperative compared to other sources of energy, which would otherwise cause serious public health and environmental damage. Prof. Themelis and Mr. Sastry are visionaries who saw the need for WTERTIndia and encouraged me throughout the process. In spite of all the ideals and ideas, financial support is imperative to conduct any research. I convey my gratitude for the generous funding I received from the Earth Engineering Center (EEC) and the Waste-to-Energy Research and Technology Council (WTERT). I would also like to thank the encouragement of ASME in the form of the MER Graduate Student Scholarship. I would also like to acknowledge Dr. Sunil Kumar and Dr. Rakesh Kumar from NEERI and their efforts in making WTERT-India possible. I would also like to thank Mr. Allard M. Nooy. I would like to convey my gratitude to the following people for their contributions: Mr. Ravi Kant of Ramky Enviro Engineers Ltd., for sharing his practical insights. He explained that even though composting might not be the best way to treat mixed solid waste, it is the better method in India compared to current practices of open dumping and burning. Ms. Bharati Chaturvedi of Chintan, after whom I met and whose publications I read, I understood the importance of waste pickers and informal recycling in developing nations. Ms. Almitra Patel, for hosting a dinner for my brother and me at her residence in Bengaluru and sharing her vision and efforts in bringing about MSW Rules 2000. Mr. B. Srinivas, Municipal Commissioner of Suryapet for giving me a tour of the waste composting facility and explaining the intricacies of achieving source separation even in a small town. Mr. S. Baskaran of IL & FS Infra, for taking the time out to describe the role the Government of India has played, and the impetus JnNURM has provided to SWM sector in India. Mr. P. S. Biju and Mr. Sajidas of Biotech, Kerala, for kindly sharing the details of their successful small scale biogas technology. Page | 8

Mr. Ajit Pandit of ABPS Infra for introducing me to the taste of vada pav, inviting me to join him on our way back to Mumbai, and engaging me in a lively discussion about renewable energy policies and tariffs in India. Ms. Roxanne Cason, for showing great confidence in me by assigning important responsibilities to me at the Cason Family Foundation (CFF). The experience I gained by working towards inclusive waste management helped me make changes to this thesis accordingly. Mr. S. Jyoti Kumar of APTDC, for his constructive criticism, and his explanations of the cases of Hyderabad and Vijayawada RDF-WTE plants. Mr. K.V.N. Ravi of GVMC for his time and valuable insights. I began working on this report as a continuat ion of Perinaz Bhadas thesis. She was not only the starting point of my research, but also provided me with important links to help my career. I cannot imagine my Masters without Ljupka Arsova. She made very special contributions in every aspect, from course selection to career opportunities. I would like to convey my heart-felt thanks and wishes to my colleagues at the Department of Earth and Environmental Engineering, Gaviota Velasco, Tim Sharobem, Jennifer McAdoo, Rob van Haaren, Thomas Nikolakakis, Marc Langenohl, Caroline Ducharme and Yani Dong for making attendance to school joyful. Special thanks to our dear Liliana Themelis and Peter Rennee for making the transition to New York and the start at Columbia a piece of cake. I must thank Prem Sagar uncle for helping me in travelling back and forth to New York, and for organizing the flattering Press Meet in India in order to share my research results. I would also like to thank Mr. Rafi at Ravindra Bharati for his encouragement after the press meet. I thank Anil Anna for providing me with accommodation in New Jersey, but more so with a family away from home. My long term room-mate and friend Rohit Jain provided me with the proverbial life support and has helped me at all times, I could always lean on h im whenever things went wrong. I also thank Nidhishree for the care and inspiration. My cousins Amar Goutham and Rajeev enthusiastically accompanied me to landfills in Hyderabad and Vishakhapatnam. , Words would not be enough to express the love and affection of my parents, brother, our Babai, Pinni and Chinnu and Sona. Words cannot express my fathers role throughout this endeavor in these few pages. It is to him that I dedicate this entire work. Ranjith Kharvel Annepu, New York City, January, 2012

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TABLE OF CONTENTS Executive Summary......................................................................................................................... 3 Acknowledgment ............................................................................................................................ 8 Table of Contents .......................................................................................................................... 10 List of Figures ................................................................................................................................ 15 List of Tables ................................................................................................................................. 18 List of Boxes .................................................................................................................................. 19 Scope of Study .............................................................................................................................. 21 Introduction .................................................................................................................................. 23 Part I, Present Situation of SWM in India ..................................................................................... 28 1. Municipal Solid Waste (MSW) .............................................................................................. 28 1.1. 1.2. 1.3 1.4 Solid Waste Management (SWM) .................................................................................. 29 Per Capita MSW Generattion ......................................................................................... 29 MSW Generation ............................................................................................................ 32 MSW Composition.......................................................................................................... 32 Composition of Urban MSW in India ...................................................................... 33

1.4.1 1.5

Economic Growth, Change in Life Styles and Effect on MSW ........................................ 34 Impact on MSW Generation and Composition in India .......................................... 35

1.5.1 1.6

Population ...................................................................................................................... 36 Population Growth.................................................................................................. 36 Impact on MSW Generation and Disposal .............................................................. 38

1.6.1 1.6.2 2

Hierarchy of Sustainable Waste Management ..................................................................... 40 2.3 Material Recovery .......................................................................................................... 41 Recycling ................................................................................................................. 41 Page | 10

2.3.1

2.3.2 2.4

Aerobic Composting................................................................................................ 42

Energy Recovery ............................................................................................................. 43 Anaerobic Digestion ................................................................................................ 43 Refuse Derived Fuel (RDF) ...................................................................................... 44 Waste-to-Energy Combustion (WTE) ...................................................................... 45

2.4.1 2.4.2 2.4.3 2.5 2.6 3

Sanitary Landfilling ......................................................................................................... 46 Unsanitary Landfilling and Open Dumping .................................................................... 47

Status of Current Waste Handling Practices in India ............................................................ 48 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 Composting or Mechanical BiologicaL Treatment (MBT) .............................................. 50 Refuse Derived Fuel (RDF) .............................................................................................. 50 Waste-to-Energy Combustion (WTE) ............................................................................. 51 Sanitary Landfills ............................................................................................................ 51

Improper Solid waste Management (Waste Disposal) ......................................................... 53 4.1 4.2 Unsanitary Landfilling (Dumping)................................................................................... 55 Open Burning, Landfill Fires & Air Quality Deterioration .............................................. 56 Air Emissions from Open Burning and Landfill Fires ............................................... 58 Dioxins/Furans Emissions ....................................................................................... 62

4.2.1 4.2.2 4.3 4.4 4.5 4.6 4.7 5

Water Pollution .............................................................................................................. 62 Land Degradation and Scarcity ...................................................................................... 63 Public Health Crisis ......................................................................................................... 65 Quality of Life (QOL) ....................................................................................................... 66 Impact on Climate Change ............................................................................................. 67

Conformance with the Hierarchy of Sustainable Waste Management ................................ 69 5.1 Recycling ......................................................................................................................... 69

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5.1.1 5.2

Informal Sector ....................................................................................................... 69

Composting .................................................................................................................... 78 Windrow Composting or Mechanical Biological Treatment (MBT) ........................ 80 Landfill Mining and Bioremediation of Landfills ..................................................... 82 Compost quality and Heavy Metal contamination ................................................. 84 Compost Yield ......................................................................................................... 86

5.2.1 5.2.2 5.2.3 5.2.4 5.3

Small Scale Anaerobic Digestion (Biogas) ...................................................................... 89 Capacity and Cost.................................................................................................... 90 Comparison ............................................................................................................. 90

5.3.1 5.3.2 5.4

Refuse Derived Fuel ....................................................................................................... 92 RDF for Solid Fuel Industry...................................................................................... 93 Existing Projects and their Performance ................................................................ 94 Analysis of RDF Plants in India ................................................................................ 95 High Percentage of Rejects ..................................................................................... 98

5.4.1 5.4.2 5.4.3 5.4.4 5.5

Waste-to-Energy Combustion ........................................................................................ 98 Power Potential from Urban MSW ....................................................................... 100 Cost ....................................................................................................................... 102 Okhla Waste-to-Energy Project, New Delhi .......................................................... 103 Emissions............................................................................................................... 103 Emissions Control Technology .............................................................................. 105 Opposition to WTE ................................................................................................ 106 On Competition with Recycling ............................................................................ 107

5.5.1 5.5.2 5.5.3 5.5.4 5.5.5 5.5.6 5.5.7 5.6 6

Source Separation ........................................................................................................ 109

Government Policy & Efforts .............................................................................................. 111

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Other sources of information ............................................................................................. 114 Conclusions ......................................................................................................................... 116

Part II, Waste-to-Energy Research and Technology Council in India (WTERT - India)................ 118 9 WTERT India ..................................................................................................................... 118 9.3 9.4 9.5 Earth Engineering Center (EEC) .................................................................................... 119 National Environmental Engineering Research Institute (NEERI) ................................ 119 Global WTERT Council .................................................................................................. 119

10 Blog, Solid Waste Management in India ............................................................................. 120 10.1 10.2 10.3 Need for a Research Blog ......................................................................................... 120 Blog Description and Statistics ................................................................................. 121 Page Views and Audience ......................................................................................... 124

10.3.1 Views ..................................................................................................................... 124 10.3.2 Audience ............................................................................................................... 124 10.3.3 Search keywords ................................................................................................... 126 10.3.4 Posts ...................................................................................................................... 127 10.3.5 Comments and Interaction ................................................................................... 128 APPENDICES ................................................................................................................................ 129 Appendix 1, Waste Generation Quantities and Rates in 366 Indian Cities in 2001 and 2011 129 Appendix 2, MSW Generated Cumulatively until 2021 by the 366 Cities Studied and MSW Generated by Entire Urban India ............................................................................................ 145 Appendix 3, Comparison Between Waste Handling Techniques in 2008 and 2010 .............. 146 Appendix 4, Air Emissions from all sources in Mumbai .......................................................... 149 Appendix 5, Calculation for Small Scale Biomethanation (in Kerala State) ............................ 150 Appendix 6, Percentage of Recyclables Recovered and Efficiency of Separating Recyclables by Waste Pickers (WPs) from Formally Collected MSW in Pune; Source: Chintan ..................... 152

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Appendix 7, Landfill Mining Projects Around the World, SOURCE: (64) ................................ 154 Appendix 8, Composting Plants in Operation in India, Source: CPCB .................................... 155 Appendix 9, Area Occupied by Known Landfills in India and Proposals for New Landfills; Source: CPCB ........................................................................................................................... 158 Appendix 10, Incidence of Health Risk and Diseases in Waste Pickers and Municipal Workers; Source: CPCB ........................................................................................................................... 160 Appendix 11, Cost and Carbon Dioxide Emissions of Transporting on Ton of MSW in India; Sources: (9), USEPA, www.mypetrolprice.com ...................................................................... 161 Appendix 12, Heavy Metals Concentration in Mixed Waste Compost; Source: IISS .............. 163 Appendix 13, Potential Hazard of Introducing Heavy Metals into Agricultural Soils ............. 164 Appendix 14, Dioxins/Furans Emissions from Open Burning of MSW in Mumbai, Sources: (5), (65) .......................................................................................................................................... 165 Appendix 15, Material and Energy Resource Wastage in the Next Decade due to Current Landfilling Practices in India.................................................................................................... 166 Annexure I, MOU between EEC and NEERI................................................................................. 167 Annexure II, Global WTERT Charter ............................................................................................ 174 Annexure III, Press Release Regarding the Formation of WTERT-India...................................... 180 References .................................................................................................................................. 182

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LIST OF FIGURES

Figure 1, Map of Cities Generating Different Quantities of MSW; Cities Visited by the Author during Research Visits ..................................................................................................................... 4 Figure 2, Scope of the Study: Green Boxes Indicate the Methods of Waste Disposal Studied in Comparison to the Hierarchy of Sustainable Waste Management .............................................. 21 Figure 3, Impact of Improper SWM on Pristine Ecosystems, Landfill Fires in Visakhapatnam Landfill, which is Located in a Valley............................................................................................. 23 Figure 4, Impact of Improper SWM on Public health: Direct Exposure of Children to Emissions from Open Burning, Hyderabad.................................................................................................... 25 Figure 5, Share of States and Union Territories in Urban MSW Generated ................................. 32 Figure 6, Share of Different Classes of Cities in Urban MSW Generated ..................................... 32 Figure 7, Change in Composition of Indian MSW since 1973, through 1995 and 2005 ............... 35 Figure 8, Total Population and Urban Population Growth in India .............................................. 37 Figure 9, Trend of Urbanization in India ....................................................................................... 37 Figure 10, Hierarchy of Sustainable Waste Management ............................................................ 40 Figure 11, Open Dump near Jaipur: Half of Jaipur Citys MSW Reaches this Site ........................ 55 Figure 12, Open Burning of MSW Inside a Garbage Bin on the Street in a High Density Residential Area in Hyderabad ..................................................................................................... 56 Figure 13, Landfill Fire at a Sanitary Landfill in India .................................................................... 57 Figure 14, Waste Picker Burning Refuse for Warmth at Night, Chandini Chowk, Delhi .............. 57 Figure 15, Open Burning of MSW Releases 22,000 tons per year of CO, HCs, PM, NOx, and SO2 into Mumbais Lower Atmosphere ............................................................................................... 59 Figure 16, Open burning is a Major Contributor to Carbon Monoxide Pollution in Mumbai ...... 59 Figure 17, Open burning is the second largest contributor of Hydrocarbons in Mumbais atmosphere ................................................................................................................................... 60 Figure 18, Open burning of MSW is the Second Largest Source of Particulate Matter Emissions in Mumbai, greater than Road Transportation ............................................................................ 60

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Figure 19, Open burning contributes to 19% of Mumbais Air Pollution due to Carbon Monoxide, Hydrocarbons and Particulate Matter .......................................................................................... 61 Figure 20, Improper SWM is an Everyday Nuisance to Urban Indians ......................................... 67 Figure 21, First Stage of Separation of Recyclables into Plastics, Metals and Glass, after Collection by Waste Pickers .......................................................................................................... 71 Figure 22, Second Stage of Separation of Plastics into Different Types ....................................... 71 Figure 23, Plastic Bottles after Second Stage of Separation ......................................................... 71 Figure 24, Sorted Metal after Second Stage of Separation .......................................................... 71 Figure 25, Secondary Separation of Waste Paper at a Bulk Waste Paper Dealer Shop ............... 72 Figure 26, Higher Incidence of all Diseases tested for in waste pickers; Appendix 10 ................ 75 Figure 27, Windrow Composting of mixed solid wastes is the most successful waste management technology in India ................................................................................................. 81 Figure 28, Material Balance Flowchart of MBT Process, with Calorific Values of Different Fractions of Composting Rejects .................................................................................................. 81 Figure 29, Heavy Metals Concentration in Mixed Solid Waste Compost in Comparison to Quality Control Standards ......................................................................................................................... 85 Figure 30, Heavy Metal Concentration beyond Quality Control Standards in Mixed Solid Waste Compost from 29 Indian Cities ..................................................................................................... 86 Figure 31, Rejects from the composting plant at Pimpri Chinchwad ........................................... 87 Figure 32, Composting Rejects are up to 60% of Input MSW and have a Calorific Value as high as 11.6 MJ/kg..................................................................................................................................... 88 Figure 33, A Small Scale Biogas Unit Developed by Biotech, Kerala; Capacity: 2 kg/day of Organic Waste ............................................................................................................................................ 89 Figure 34, Conveyor Belt for Feeding RDF into the WTE Boiler, Hyderabad RDF-WTE Plant, Elikatta .......................................................................................................................................... 96 Figure 35, Condensers of Hyderabad RDF-WTE Plant, Elikatta .................................................... 97 Figure 36, Comparison of German Emissions Standards and Emissions achieved by German WTE facilities ....................................................................................................................................... 104 Page | 16

Figure 37, Sustainability ladder of SWM in Europe .................................................................... 108 Figure 38, Impact of Source Separation on Heavy Metals Concentration in MSW Compost .... 109 Figure 39, Internet Search for "Solid Waste Management" ....................................................... 120 Figure 40, Internet Searches for "Solid Waste Management" from Different Cities ................. 121 Figure 41, Opening Page of the Blog, www.SwmIndia.blogspot.com ........................................ 122 Figure 42, Top Results for "Solid Waste Management in India on Google Search ................... 123 Figure 43, Top Results for "Solid Waste Management in India on Yahoo Search .................... 123 Figure 44, Top Results for "Solid Waste Management in India on Bing Search ....................... 123 Figure 45, Top Results for "Solid Waste Management in India on Altavista Search ................ 123 Figure 46, Number of All-time Page Views of the Blog since its First Post in September, 09 .... 124 Figure 47, Geographic Distribution of Audience to the Blog since its Creation in May, 09 ....... 125 Figure 48, Distribution of the Search Keywords used by Public to find this Information (Blog) 126 Figure 49, Distribution of the Number of Views per Article Posted on the Blog ....................... 127

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LIST OF TABLES

Table 1: Sources and Types of Municipal Solid Waste ................................................................. 28 Table 2 Comparison between the per capita MSW generation rates in Low, Middle and High Income Countries .......................................................................................................................... 30 Table 3, Highest and Lowest Waste Generation and Waste Generation Rates Among Metros, Class 1 cities, States, UTs, and North, East, West, South regions of India ................................... 30 Table 4, Per Capita Waste Generation Rate depending upon the Population Size of Cities ........ 31 Table 5, Components and Waste Materials in MSW .................................................................... 33 Table 6, Composition of MSW in India and Regional Variation .................................................... 34 Table 7, Population Growth and Impact on Overall Urban Waste Generation and Future Predictions until 2041 ................................................................................................................... 38 Table 8, Area of Land Occupied/Required for unsanitary disposal of MSW ................................ 38 Table 9, Status of Present Waste Handling Techniques in India .................................................. 48 Table 10, Landfill Gas Recovery Feasibility in Indian Landfills ...................................................... 52 Table 11, Air Emissions Inventory from Open burning of MSW and Other Combustion Sources in Mumbai ......................................................................................................................................... 61 Table 12, Area Occupied by Known Landfills in India ................................................................... 64 Table 13, Bioremediation Projects Undertaken in India Until 2007 ............................................. 83 Table 14, Composition of Various Fractions of MSW during Mechanical Biological Treatment . 88 Table 15, Comparison of small scale biogas and WTE Combustion as options for SWM in Chennai ......................................................................................................................................... 91 Table 16, Potential for Energy Generation from MSW and Fossil Fuel (Coal) Displacement .... 100 Table 17, Low Emissions Achieved by German WTE Facilities ................................................... 104 Table 18, WTE Air Emissions, Emission Sources and Causes, and Control Technology ............. 105 Table 19, Effect of Source Separation on Heavy Metals in MSW Compost ............................... 109 Table 20, JnNURM Projects Undertaken, and Government Share ............................................. 112 Page | 18

LIST OF BOXES

Box 1, SOURCES OF URBAN ORGANIC WASTES ............................................................................ 42 BOX 2, IMPACTS OF IMPROPER SOLID WASTE MANAGEMENT ............................................... 53 BOX 3, INFORMAL WASTE MANEGEMENT IN INDIA ................................................................. 70 Box 4, HURDLES IN ORGANIZING WASTE PICKERS; UNPREDICTABILITY & UNRELIABILITY .......... 74 Box 5: INTEGRATING THE INFORMAL SECTOR INTO FORMAL WASTE MANAGEMENT SYSTEMS 77 Box 6, HISTORY OF COMPOSTING AND REASONS FOR INITIAL FAILURES .................................... 79 Box 7, SOLID FUEL INDUSTRY IN INDIA ......................................................................................... 93 Box 8 GOVERNMENT POLICY ...................................................................................................... 111 Box 9, JAWAHARLAL NEHRU NATIONAL URBAN RENEWAL MISSION (JnNURM) ...................... 113 Box 10, SELECTED CONTENTS IN THE SOLID WASTE MANAGEMENT MANUAL......................... 114

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SCOPE OF STUDY This report focuses on various options available for the disposal of municipal solid waste (MSW) sustainably and attempts to provide a documented picture of their suitability to India. The report is divided into two parts, Part I and Part II. The first part will explain the present solid waste management (SWM) crisis in India, its impacts on public health, environment and quality of life and touch upon efforts towards SWM in the past. The second part deals with the Earth Engineering Centers initiative, WTERT India to help improve SWM in India and presents some articles viewership statistics of the internet blog (www.swmindia.blogspot.com) based upon this research.

Figure 2, Scope of the Study: Green Boxes Indicate the Methods of Waste Disposal Studied in Comparison to the Hierarchy of Sustainable Waste Management

The first part introduces the Hierarchy of Sustainable Waste Management (Figure 10), which will act as the framework for the rest of this report. It then presents the current situation of SWM in Indian cities, discussing unsanitary landfilling and open burning of wastes; and their effects on the day-to-day lives of urban Indians. Part I also discusses specific technologies and

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mechanisms as probable solutions to Indias SWM crisis. The areas of focus were Recycling, Aerobic Composting (or Mechanical Biological Treatment), Small Scale Biogas (or Biomethanation), Refuse Derived Fuel (RDF) and Waste-to-Energy Combustion (WTE), as represented by the green boxes in (Figure 2). These technologies were selected based upon their success inside and outside India, suitability to Indian conditions, environmental impact and economics. Composting and small scale biomethanation were chosen specifically due to their success in India in treating organic wastes. Composting was also chosen to point out a likely side-effect of mixed waste composting. Mixed waste composting is also called as Mechanical Biological Treatment (MBT). Use of compost from MBT facilities for agricultural purposes introduces heavy metals into human food chain. Small scale biomethanation was chosen due to its high position on the hierarchy of sustainable waste management and its collective potential to divert waste from landfills. Informal recycling is studied as an integral part of SWM considering its effectiveness in recycling waste and its robust collection and supply chains in large Indian cities. Informal recycling is getting due recognition and gaining wider consensus around the world for its role in SWM in middle and low income nations. RDF and WTE are chosen based upon their potential to divert wastes from landfill and their potential to generate energy from residual mixed wastes. Failures of RDF and WTE plants are analyzed and compared to the initial failures of MBT plants. Despite the best waste handling practices, a fraction of MSW that has to be landfilled will always exist; therefore an introduction to sanitary landfilling is included as an end-of-the-loop solution. Short details of other sources of information about government policy and regulations, theoretical aspects of SWM, and specifications followed in Indian SWM projects are provided in Section 7.

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INTRODUCTION

India is the second largest nation in the world, with a population of 1.21 billion, accounting for nearly 18% of worlds human population, but it does not have enough resources or adequate systems in place to treat its solid wastes. Its urban population grew at a rate of 31.8% during the last decade to 377 million, which is greater than the entire population of US, the third largest country in the world according to population (3). India is facing a sharp contrast between its increasing urban population and available services and resources. Solid waste management (SWM) is one such service where India has an enormous gap to fill. Proper municipal solid waste (MSW) disposal systems to address the burgeoning amount of wastes are absent. The current SWM services are inefficient, incur heavy expenditure and are so low as to be a potential threat to the public health and environmental quality (4). Improper solid waste management deteriorates public health, causes environmental pollution, accelerates natural resources degradation, causes climate change and greatly impacts the quality of life of citizens (See Section 4).

Figure 3, Impact of Improper SWM on Pristine Ecosystems, Landfill Fires in Visakhapatnam Landfill, which is Located in a Valley

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The present citizens of India are living in times of unprecedented economic growth, rising aspirations, and rapidly changing lifestyles, which will raise the expectations on public health and quality of life. Remediation and recovery of misused resources will also be expected. These expectations when not met might result in a low quality of life for the citizens (See Section 4.6). Pollution of whether air, water or land results in long-term reduction of productivity leading to a deterioration of economic condition of a country. Therefore, controlling pollution to reduce risk of poor health, to protect the natural environment and to contribute to our quality of life is a key component of sustainable development (5). The per capita waste generation rate in India has increased from 0.44 kg/day in 2001 to 0.5 kg/day in 2011, fuelled by changing lifestyles and increased purchasing power of urban Indians. Urban population growth and increase in per capita waste generation have resulted in a 50% increase in the waste generated by Indian cities within only a decade since 2001. There are 53 cities in India with a million plus population, which together generate 86,000 TPD (31.5 million tons per year) of MSW at a per capita waste generation rate of 500 grams/day. The total MSW generated in urban India is estimated to be 68.8 million tons per year (TPY) or 188,500 tons per day (TPD) of MSW. Such a steep increase in waste generation within a decade has severed the stress on all available natural, infrastructural and budgetary resources. Big cities collect about 70 - 90% of MSW generated, whereas smaller cities and towns collect less than 50% of waste generated. More than 91% of the MSW collected formally is landfilled on open lands and dumps (6). It is estimated that about 2% of the uncollected wastes are burnt openly on the streets. About 10% of the collected MSW is openly burnt or is caught in landfill fires (5). Such open burning of MSW and landfill fires together releases 22,000 tons of pollutants into the lower atmosphere of Mumbai city every year (Figure 15). The pollutants include carbon monoxide (CO), carcinogenic hydro carbons (HC) (includes dioxins and furans), particulate matter (PM), nitrogen oxides (NOx) and sulfur dioxide (SO2) (5). Most of the recyclable waste is collected by the informal recycling sector in India prior to and after formal collection by Urban Local Bodies (ULB). Amount of recyclables collected by informal sector prior to formal collection are generally not accounted. This report estimates that 21% of recyclables collected formally are separated by the formal sector at transfer stations and dumps. Even though this number does not include amount of recycling prior to formal collection, it compares fairly well with the best recycling percentages achieved around the world (See Section 5.1.1). Informal recycling system is lately receiving its due recognition world-wide for its role in waste management in developing nations. In India, government policy and non-governmental organizations (NGOs) are expected to organize the sector present in different regions, and to help integrating it into the overall formal system. Plastic Waste Management and Handling Rules, 2011 by the Ministry of Environment and Forests (MOEF) is a

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step ahead in this direction. These rules mandate ULBs to coordinate with all stake holders in solid waste management, which includes waste pickers.

Figure 4, Impact of Improper SWM on Public health: Direct Exposure of Children to Emissions from Open Burning, Hyderabad

All attempts to recover materials and energy from MSW have encountered initial failures. Ten aerobic composting (MBT) projects in 1970s, a WTE project in 1980s, a large scale biomethanation project, and two RDF projects in 2003 have failed. Anaerobic digestion of MSW on a large scale does not work in India due to the absence of source separated organic waste stream. The large scale biomethanation plant built in Lucknow to generate 6 MW of electricity, failed to run because of this. Anaerobic digestion has however been successful at smaller scales, for vegetable and meat markets, restaurants or hotels and at the household level. Twenty thousand household biogas units installed by Biotech, a bio gas technology company from Thiruvananthapuram, Kerala divert about 2.5% of organic waste from landfill. By doing so, they save up to USD 4.5 million (INR 225 million) to Thiruvananthapuram, and Kochi ULBs every year in transportation costs. These biogas units also avoid around 7,000 tons of CO2 equivalent (TCO2) emissions every year (See Section 5.3). Aerobic composting is the most widely employed SWM technology in India. It is estimated that up to 6% of MSW collected is composted in various MBT facilities (7). There are more than 80

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MBT plants in India treating mixed MSW, most of them located in the states of Maharashtra (19), Himachal Pradesh (11), Chhattisgarh (9) and Orissa (7) (Appendix 8). More than 26 new MBT plants are proposed in different cities and towns across India (Appendix 8). Even though composting of mixed wastes is a better solution compared to landfilling or openly burning those wastes, it is not the best (8). Compost from MBT facilities was found to be of low quality and to contain toxic heavy metals which could enter human food chain if used for agriculture (See Section 5.2.3). India has a total of five RDF processing plants, located near Hyderabad, Vijayawada, Jaipur, Chandigarh and Rajkot. The first two plants burn the RDF produced in WTE boilers, whereas the next two burn the RDF in cement kilns. Details about the Rajkot facility are not available. All these facilities have encountered severe problems during operation. Problems were majorly due to lack of proper financial and logistical planning and not due to the technology. Only two WTE combustion plants were built in India, both in New Delhi. The latest one among them has finished construction in Okhla landfill site and is about to begin operations. It is designed to generate 16 MW of electricity by combusting 1350 TPD of MSW. All technological solutions attempted in India have encountered initial failures in India. These include the ten MBT (composting) facilities built in 1975-1976, the WTE facility built in 1985 in Delhi, the two RDF plants built in 2003 near Hyderabad and Vijayawada. None of these plants are currently in operation. The ten MBT and the 1985 WTE plant are now completely closed. Major reasons for these failures are, the plants were designed for handling more waste than could be acquired; allocation of funds for plant maintenance was ignored; and local conditions were not considered while importing the technology. The success of MBT in India is partly due to the lessons learned from such failures. The failure of WTE however raised enormous public opposition and has hindered any efforts in that direction. Failure of biomethanation plants was also attributed to WTE combustion due to the confusion in the terminology. Failure of RDF plants has attracted attention and opposition too; however, numerous attempts at installing this technology are continuously made. MSW rules 2000 made by the Government of India to regulate the management and handling of municipal solid wastes (MSW) provide a framework for treatment and disposal of MSW. These rules were the result of a Public Interest Litigation (PIL) in the Supreme Court of India (SC). The MSW rules 2002 and other documents published by the Government of India (GOI) recommend adoption of different technologies, which include biomethanation, gasification, pyrolysis, plasma gasification, refuse derived fuel (RDF), waste-to-energy combustion (WTE), sanitary landfills (SLF). However, the suitability of technologies to Indian conditions has not been sufficiently studied, especially with regard to the sustainable management of the entire MSW stream and reducing its environmental and health impacts. Page | 26

Due to lack of data and infrastructural, financial and human resources, the Supreme Court mandate of complete compliance to the rules by 2003 could not be achieved by urban local bodies (ULBs) and that goal still remains to be a distant dream (7). As a result, even after a decade since the issuance of the MSW Rules 2000, the state of MSW management systems in the country continues to raise serious public health concerns (9). Although some cities have achieved some progress in SWM, many cities and towns have not even initiated measures (7). Initiatives in Mumbai were the result of heavy rains and consequent flooding in 2006 due to drains clogged by solid waste. The flood in Mumbai in 2006 paved the way for enacting State level legislation pertaining to the collection, transport and disposal of urban solid waste in the state of Maharashtra (7). Bubonic plague epidemic in Surat in 1994 increased awareness on the need for proper SWM systems all over India and kick started measures to properly manage wastes in Surat. Scarcity of suitable landfill sites is a major constraint, increasingly being faced by ULBs. Such difficulties are paving the way to building regional landfills and WTE and mechanical biological treatment (MBT) solutions. The tremendous pressure on the budgetary resources of States/ULBs due to increasing quantities of MSW and lack of infrastructure has helped them involve private sector in urban development (7). GOI has also invested significantly in SWM projects under the 12th Finance Commission and Jawaharlal Nehru National Urban Renewal Mission (JnNURM). The financial assistance provided by GOI to states and ULBs amounted to USD 510 million (INR 2,500 crores) (7).

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PART I, PRESENT SITUATION OF SWM IN INDIA


1.

MUNICIPAL SOLID WASTE (MSW)

Waste is defined as any material that is not useful and does not represent any economic value to its owner, the owner being the waste generator (10). Depending on the physical state of waste, wastes are categorized into solid, liquid and gaseous. Solid Wastes are categorized into municipal wastes, hazardous wastes, medical wastes and radioactive wastes. Managing solid waste generally involves planning, financing, construction and operation of facilities for the collection, transportation, recycling and final disposition of the waste (10). This study focuses only on the disposal of municipal solid waste (MSW), as an element of overall municipal solid waste management or just solid waste management (SWM).
Table 1: Sources and Types of Municipal Solid Waste; Source (11)

Sources Residential

Commercial Institutional Municipal services

Typical waste generators Components of solid waste Single and multifamily Food wastes, paper, cardboard, plastics, textiles, dwellings glass, metals, ashes, special wastes (bulky items, consumer electronics, batteries, oil, tires) and household hazardous wastes Stores, hotels, restaurants, Paper, cardboard, plastics, wood, food wastes, glass, markets, office buildings metals, special wastes, hazardous wastes Schools, government center, Paper, cardboard, plastics, wood, food wastes, glass, hospitals, prisons metals, special wastes, hazardous wastes Street cleaning, landscaping, Street sweepings, landscape and tree trimmings, parks, beaches, recreational general wastes from parks, beaches, and other areas recreational areas

MSW is defined as any waste generated by household, commercial and/or institutional activities and is not hazardous (10). Depending upon the source, MSW is categorized into three types: Residential or household waste which arises from domestic areas from individual houses; commercial wastes and/or institutional wastes which arise from individually larger sources of MSW like hotels, office buildings, schools, etc.; municipal services wastes which arise from area sources like streets, parks, etc. MSW usually contains food wastes, paper, cardboard, plastics, textiles, glass, metals, wood, street sweepings, landscape and tree trimmings, general wastes from parks, beaches, and other recreational areas (11). Sometimes other household wastes like batteries and consumer electronics also get mixed up with MSW.

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1.1. SOLID WASTE MANAGEMENT (SWM)

A solid waste management (SWM) system includes the generation of waste, storage, collection, transportation, processing and final disposal. This study will focus on disposal options for MSW in India. Agricultural and manufactured products of no more value are discarded as wastes. Once items are discarded as waste, they need to be collected. Waste collection in most parts of the world is centralized and all kinds of waste generated by a household or institution are collected together as mixed wastes. Solid waste management (SWM) is a basic public necessity and this service is provided by respective urban local bodies (ULBs) in India. SWM starts with the collection of solid wastes and ends with their disposal and/or beneficial use. Proper SWM requires separate collection of different wastes, called source separated waste collection. Source separated collection is common in high income regions of the world like Europe, North America and Japan where the infrastructure to transport separate waste streams exists. Most centralized municipal systems in low income countries like India collect solid wastes in a mixed form because source separate collection systems are non-existent. Source separated collection of waste is limited by infrastructure, personnel and public awareness. A significant amount of paper is collected in a source separated form, but informally. In this report, unmixed waste will be specially referred to as source separated waste, in all other cases municipal solid waste (MSW) or solid waste would refer to mixed wastes. Indian cities are still struggling to achieve the collection of all MSW generated. Metros and other big cities in India collect between 70- 90% of MSW. Smaller cities and towns collect less than 50% (6). The benchmark for collection is 100%, which is one of the most important targets for ULBs at present. This is a reason why source separated collection is not yet in the radar.
1.2.

PER CAPITA MSW GENERATTION

The per capita waste generation rate is strongly correlated to the gross domestic product (GDP) of a country (Table 2). Per capita waste generation is the amount of waste generated by one person in one day in a country or region. The waste generation rate generally increases with increase in GDP. High income countries generate more waste per person compared to low income countries due to reasons discussed in further sections. The average per capita waste generation in India is 370 grams/day as compared to 2,200 grams in Denmark, 2,000 grams in US and 700 grams in China (12) (13) (14).

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Table 2 Comparison between the per capita MSW generation rates in Low, Middle and High Income Countries

Country

Per Capita Urban MSW Generation (kg/day) 1999 2025 0.45 - 0.9 0.52 - 1.1 1.1 - 5.07 0.6 - 1.0 0.8 - 1.5 1.1 - 4.5

Low Income Countries Middle Income Countries High Income Countries

Waste generation rate in Indian cities ranges between 200 - 870 grams/day, depending upon the regions lifestyle and the size of the city. The per capita waste generation is increasing by about 1.3% per year in India (7).
Table 3, Highest and Lowest Waste Generation and Waste Generation Rates Among Metros, Class 1 cities, States, UTs, and North, East, West, South regions of India

Value Metros Class 1 Cities All Cities States Union Territories (UT) Regions City Value City Value City Value State Value UT Value Region

Waste Generation (TPD) Low High 3,344 11,520 Greater Bengaluru Greater Kolkata 317 2,602 Rajkot Pune 5 11,520 Kavarati Kolkata 19 23,647 Arunachal Maharashtra Pradesh 5 11,558 Lakshadweep Delhi 696 East 88,800 West

Per Capita Waste Generation (kg/day) Low High 0.445 0.708 Greater Chennai Bengaluru 0.217 0.765 Nashik Kochi 0.194 0.867 Kohima Port Blair 0.217 0.616 Manipur Goa 0.342 Lakshadweep 0.382 East 0.867 Andaman Nicobar 0.531 West

&

Cities in Western India were found to be generating the least amount of waste per person, only 440 grams/day, followed by East India (500 g/day), North India (520 g/day), and South India. Southern Indian cities generate 560 grams/day, the maximum waste generation per person. States with minimum and maximum per capita waste generation rates are Manipur (220 grams/day) and Goa (620 grams/day). Manipur is an Eastern state and Goa is Western and both are comparatively small states. Among bigger states, each person in Gujarat generates 395 g/day; followed by Orissa (400 g/day) and Madhya Pradesh (400 grams/day). Among states generating large amounts of MSW per person are Tamil Nadu (630 g/day), Jammu & Kashmir (600 g/day) and Andhra Pradesh (570 g/day). Among Union Territories, Andaman and Nicobar Page | 30

Islands generate the highest (870 grams/day) per capita, while Lakshadweep Islands (340 grams/day) generates the least per capita. Per capita waste generation in Delhi, the biggest Union Territory is 650 g/day. The Census of India classifies cities and towns into 4 classes, Class 1, Class 2, Class 3, and Class 4, depending upon their population (Table 4). Most of the cities studied during this research fell under Class 1. For the purpose of this study, these Class 1 cities were further categorized as Metropolitan, Class A, Class B, etc, until Class H depending upon the population of these cities. This finer classification allowed the author to observe the change in waste generation closer. However, the waste generation rates did not vary significantly between Class A, B, C, D, E, F, G & H cities. They fell in a narrow range of 0.43-0.49 kg/person/day. They generated significantly less MSW per person compared to the six metropolitan cities (0.6 kg/day). The per capita waste generation values of Class 2, 3 and 4 towns calculated in this report are not expected to represent respective classes due to the extremely small data set available. Data for only 6 out of 345 Class 2 cities, 4 out of 947 Class 3 cities and 1 out of 1,167 class 4 towns was available. Despite the lack of data in Class 2, 3, and 4 towns, the 366 cities and towns represent 70% of Indias urban population and provide a fair estimation of the average per capita waste generation in Urban India (0.5 kg/day).
Table 4, Per Capita Waste Generation Rate depending upon the Population Size of Cities and Towns

Original Classification

Class 1

Classification for this Study Metropolitan Class A Class B Class C Class D Class E Class F Class G Class H

Population Range (2001 Census) 5,000,000 1,000,000 700,000 500,000 400,000 300,000 200,000 150,000 100,000 50,000 20,000 10,000 Above 4,999,999 999,999 699,999 499,999 399,999 299,999 199,999 149,999 99,999 49,999 19,999

Class 2 Class 3 Class 4 TOTAL

No. of Cities 6 32 20 19 19 31 58 59 111 6 4 1 366

Per Capita kg/day 0.605 0.448 0.464 0.487 0.448 0.436 0.427 0.459 0.445 0.518 0.434 0.342

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1.3

MSW GENERATION

Generation of MSW has an obvious relation to the population of the area or city, due to which bigger cities generate more waste. The metropolitan area of Kolkata generates the largest amount of MSW (11,520 TPD or 4.2 million TPY) among Indian cities. Among the four geographical regions in India, Northern India generates the highest amount of MSW (40,500 TPD or 14.8 million TPY), 30% of all MSW generated in India; and Eastern India (23,500 TPD or 8.6 million TPY) generates the least, only 17% of MSW generated in India. Among states, Maharashtra (22,200 TPD or 8.1 million TPY), West Bengal (15,500 TPD or 5.7 million TPY), Uttar Pradesh (13,000 TPD or 4.75 million TPY), Tamil Nadu (12,000 TPD or 4.3 million TPY) Andhra Pradesh (11,500 TPD or 4.15 million TPY) generate the highest amount of MSW. Among Union Territories, Delhi (11,500 TPD or 4.2 million TPY) generates the highest and Chandigarh (486 TPD or 177,400 TPY) generates the second highest amount of waste.
Class G Class F 5% 6% Class E 5% West Bengal 12.0% Uttar Pradesh Tamil 10.0% Nadu 9.0%

Madhya Others Pradesh 15.6% 3.5% Rajastha n 3.8% Gujarat 5.4%

Maharah stra 17.1%

Class H 6%

Metros 37%

Class C 5% Class B Class D 8% 4%

Andhra Pradesh Karnatak 8.8% a 6.0%

Delhi 8.9%

Class A 24%

Figure 5, Share of States and Union Territories in Urban MSW Generated

Figure 6, Share of Different Classes of Cities in Urban MSW Generated

1.4

MSW COMPOSITION

Materials in MSW can be broadly categorized into three groups, Compostables, Recyclables and Inerts. Compostables or organic fraction comprises of food waste, vegetable market wastes and yard waste. Recyclables are comprised of paper, plastic, metal and glass. The fraction of MSW which can neither be composted nor recycled into secondary raw materials is called Inerts.

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Inerts comprise stones, ash and silt which enter the collection system due to littering on streets and at public places. Waste composition dictates the waste management strategy to be employed in a particular location. Organics in MSW are putrescible, and are food for pests and insects and hence need to be collected and disposed off on a daily basis. The amount of recyclables like paper and plastic in MSW dictates how often they need to be collected. Recyclables represent an immediate monetary value to the collectors. Organics need controlled biological treatment to be of any value, however due to the general absence of such facilities, organics do not represent any direct value to informal collectors.
Table 5, Components and Waste Materials in MSW

MSW components Materials Compostables Food waste, landscape and tree trimmings Recyclables Paper, Cardboard, Plastics, Glass, Metals Inerts Stones and silt, bones, and other inorganic materials 1.4.1 COMPOSITION OF URBAN MSW IN INDIA

A major fraction of urban MSW in India is organic matter (51%). Recyclables are 17.5 % of the MSW and the rest 31% is inert waste. The average calorific value of urban MSW is 7.3 MJ/kg (1,751 Kcal/kg) and the average moisture content is 47% (Table 6). It has to be understood that this composition is at the dump and not the composition of the waste generated. The actual percentage of recyclables discarded as waste in India is unknown due to informal picking of waste which is generally not accounted. Accounting wastes collected informally will change the composition of MSW considerably and help estimating the total waste generated by communities. The large fraction of organic matter in the waste makes it suitable for aerobic and anaerobic digestion. Significant recyclables percentage after informal recycling suggests that efficiency of existing systems should be increased. Recycling and composting efficiency are greatly reduced due to the general absence of source separation. Absence of source separation also strikes centralized aerobic or anaerobic digestion processes off the list. Anaerobic digestion is highly sensitive to feed quality and any impurity can upset the entire plant. Aerobic digestion leads to heavy metals leaching into the final compost due to presence of impurities and makes it unfit for use on agricultural soils. In such a situation the role of waste to energy technologies and sanitary landfilling increases significantly. This is due to the flexibility of waste-to-energy technologies in handling mixed wastes. Sanitary landfilling needs to be practiced to avoid Page | 33

negative impacts of open dumping and open burning of wastes on public health, and on air, water and land resources. Therefore, increasing source separation rates is always the long term priority.
Table 6, Composition of MSW in India and Regional Variation

Region/City

MSW (TPD) 51,402 2,723 380 6,835 2,343 380 130,000

Compostables Recyclables (%) (%) 50.89 51.91 50.41 52.38 53.41 50.41 51.3 16.28 19.23 21.44 16.78 17.02 21.44 17.48

Inerts (%) 32.82 28.86 28.15 30.85 29.57 28.15 31.21

Moisture (%) 46 49 46 49 51 46 47

Cal. Value (MJ/kg) 6.4 8.7 9.8 6.8 7.6 9.8 7.3

Metros Other cities East India North India South India West India Overall Urban India

Cal. Value (kcal/kg) 1,523 2,084 2,341 1,623 1,827 2,341 1,751

1.4.1.1 PERCENTAGE OF RECYCLABLES AND INFORMAL RECYCLING

A significant amount of recyclables are separated from MSW prior to and after formal collection by the informal recycling sector. The amount of recyclables separated by the informal sector after formal collection is as much as 21% (Appendix 6). The amount of recyclables separated prior to collection is generally not accounted for by the formal sector and could be as much as four times the amount of recyclables separated after formal collection. Comparing the percentage of recyclables in MSW in metro cities with that in smaller cities clearly shows the increased activity of informal sector in metros and other large cities. Increased presence of informal sector in large cities explains the huge difference in recyclables composition between large and small cities, observed by Perinaz Bhada, et al. (15). In metro cities, which generally have a robust presence of informal recycling sector, the amount of recyclables at the dump is 16.28%, whereas in smaller cities where the presence of informal sector is smaller, the composition of recyclables is 19.23%. The difference of 3% in the amount of recyclables at the dump indicates the higher number of waste pickers and their activity in larger cities.
1.5 ECONOMIC GROWTH, CHANGE IN LIFE STYLES AND EFFECT ON MSW

The waste generation rate generally increases with increase in GDP during the initial stages of economic development of a country (16), because increase in GDP increases the purchasing power of a country which in turn causes changes in lifestyle. Even a slight increase in income in urban areas of developing countries can cause a few changes in lifestyle, food habits and living Page | 34

standards and at the same time changes in consumption patterns (16). Therefore, high income countries generate more waste per person compared to low income countries due to the difference in lifestyles.
1.5.1 IMPACT ON MSW GENERATION AND COMPOSITION IN INDIA

Since economic reforms in 1992 1993, India has undergone rapid urbanization, which changed material consumption patterns, and increased the per capita waste generation rate. Since 2011, India underwent unprecedented economic growth and the urban per capita waste generation increased from 440 grams/day to 500 grams/day at a decadal per capita waste generation growth rate of 13.6%. The change in lifestyles has caused considerable change in the composition of MSW generated in India too. Following a trend expected during the economic growth of a country, the percentage of plastics, paper and metal discarded into the waste stream increased significantly and the amount of inerts in the collected waste stream decreased likewise due to changes in collection systems. From 1973 to 1995, the composition of inerts in MSW decreased by 9%, whereas organic matter increased by 1% and recyclables increased by 8% (Figure 7). However, from 1995 to 2005, inerts decreased by 11%, compostables increased by 10% and recyclables by only 1%. The increase in compostables and recyclables observed (Figure 7) is due to a) increase in recyclable wastes generated due to lifestyle changes, and b) decrease in the overall percentage of inerts due to improvement in collection.
60% 50% 40% 1973 30% 20% 10% 0% Compostables Recyclables Inerts 1995 2005

Figure 7, Change in Composition of Indian MSW since 1973, through 1995 and 2005

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1.6

POPULATION

India is the second most populous nation on the planet. The Census of 2011 estimates a population of 1.21 billion which is 17.66% of the world population. It is as much as the combined population of USA, Indonesia, Brazil, Pakistan, Bangladesh and Japan. The population of Uttar Pradesh, one among 28 Indian states is greater than that of Brazil, the fifth most populous nation in the world. Indias urban population was 285 million in 2001 and increased by 31.8% to 377 million in 2011. Indian urban population is greater than the total population of USA (308.7 million), the third most populous nation. Appendix 1 lists 366 cities which represent 70% of Indias urban population and generate 130,000 TPD or 47.2 million TPY at a per capita waste generation rate of 500 grams/day. This implies the total MSW generated by urban India could be as much as 188,500 TPD or 68.8 million TPY. This number matches the projection (65 million TPY in 2010) by Sunil Kumar, et al. (17). Therefore, this report assumes that the quantum of waste generated by urban India to be 68.8 million TPY. The general consensus on amount of waste generated by urban India is 50 million TPY, which is a very low in comparison to the current findings. The six metro cities, Kolkata, Mumbai, Delhi, Chennai, Hyderabad and Bengaluru together generate 48,000 TPD (17.5 million TPY) of MSW. Currently, India has 53 cities with populations greater than one million, generating 86,245 TPD (31.5 million TPY), which is about 46 % of the total MSW generated in urban India. The remaining 313 cities studied generate 15.7 million TPY (43,000 TPD), 23% of the total urban MSW, only half of that generated by the 53 cities with million plus population.
1.6.1 POPULATION GROWTH

Indian population increased by more than 181 million during 2001 2011, a 17.64% increase in population, since 2001. Even though this was the sharpest decline in population growth rate registered post-Independence the absolute addition during 2001-2011 is almost as much as the population of Brazil, the fifth most populous country in the world. It is clear that the scale of populations dealt with in case of India and China are entirely different from any other country in the world. The third most populous nation after China and India is US, with a population of 308.7 million, which is only a quarter of Indias population . Urban population in India alone, which is 377 million, exceeds this figure. Indian urban population increased by 31.8 % during 2001 2011, which implies an annual growth rate of 2.8% during this period. Page | 36

Figure 8, Total Population and Urban Population Growth in India

Urban population growth in India has always been higher than the overall population growth as can be seen in Figure 8, implying a trend of urbanization. Compared to the steady decrease in the percentage of urbanization during 1981 2001, the value stabilized during the past two decades, 1991 2011 (Figure 9). The urban population growth in the past decade increased the quantum of wastes generated by urban India by 50%.

Figure 9, Trend of Urbanization in India

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1.6.2 IMPACT ON MSW GENERATION AND DISPOSAL

Population growth and rapid urbanization means bigger and denser cities and increased MSW generation in each city. The data compiled for this report indicate that 366 cities in India were generating 31.6 million tons of waste in 2001 and are currently generating 47.3 million tons, a 50% increase in one decade. It is estimated that these 366 cities will generate 161 million tons of MSW in 2041, a five-fold increase in four decades. At this rate the total urban MSW generated in 2041 would be 230 million TPY (630,000 TPD).
Table 7, Population Growth and Impact on Overall Urban Waste Generation and Future Predictions until 2041

Year 2001 2011 2021 2031 2036 2041

Population Per Capita Total Waste generation (Millions) Thousand Tons/year 197.3 0.439 31.63 260.1 0.498 47.30 342.8 0.569 71.15 451.8 0.649 107.01 518.6 0.693 131.24 595.4 0.741 160.96

MSW Rules 2000 mandate landfills should always be located away from habitation clusters and other places of social, economic or environmental importance , which implies lands outside the city. Therefore, increase in MSW will have significant impacts in terms of land required for disposing the waste as it gets more difficult to site landfills (7). Farther the landfill gets from the point of waste generation (city), greater will be the waste transportation cost. The solution to reducing these costs and alternatives to landfilling are discussed in detail in further sections.
Table 8, Area of Land Occupied/Required for unsanitary disposal of MSW

Year

1947 - 2001 1947 - 2011 1947 - 2021 2009 - 2047

Area of Land Occupied/Required for MSW Disposal (sq.km) 240 380 590 1,400

City Equivalents

50% of Mumbai 90% of Chennai Hyderabad Hyderabad + Mumbai + Chennai

A 1998 study by TERI (The Energy Resources Institute, earlier Tata Energy Research Institute) titled Solid Waste Management in India: options and opportunities calculated the amount of Page | 38

land that was occupied by waste disposed post independence, until 1997. The study compared the land occupied in multiples of the size of a football field and arrived at 71,000 football fields of solid waste, stacked 9 meters high. Based on a business as usual (BAU) scenario of 91% landfilling, the study estimates that the waste generated by 2001 would have occupied 240 sq.km or an area half the size of Mumbai; waste generated by 2011 would have occupied 380 sq.km or about 220,000 football fields or 90% of Chennai, the fourth biggest Indian city areawise; waste generated by 2021 would need 590 sq.km which is greater than the area of Hyderabad (583 sq.km), the largest Indian city, area-wise (18) (19). The Position Paper on The Solid Waste Management Sector in India, published by Ministry of Finance in 2009, estimates a requirement of more than 1400 sq.km of land for solid waste disposal by the end of 2047 if MSW is not properly handled and is equal to the area of Hyderabad, Mumbai and Chennai together.

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HIERARCHY OF SUSTAINABLE WASTE MANAGEMENT

The Hierarchy of Sustainable Waste Management (Figure 10) developed by the Earth Engineering Center at Columbia University is widely used as a reference to sustainable solid waste management and disposal. This report is presented in reference to this hierarchy. For the specific purpose of this study, Unsanitary Landfilling and Open Burning has been added to the original hierarchy of waste management which ends with sanitary landfills (SLFs). Unsanitary landfilling and open burning will represent the indiscriminate dumping and burning of MSW and represents the general situation of SWM in India and other developing countries.

Figure 10, Hierarchy of Sustainable Waste Management

The hierarchy of waste management recognizes that reducing the use of materials and reusing them to be the most environmental friendly. Source reduction begins with reducing the amount of waste generated and reusing materials to prevent them from entering the waste stream (15). Thus, waste is not generated until the end of reuse phase. Once the waste is generated, it needs to be collected. Material recovery from waste in the form of recycling and composting is recognized to be the most effective way of handling wastes. Due to technical and economic Page | 40

limitations of recycling; product design; inadequate source separation; and lack of sufficient markets that can use all sorted materials, most of the MSW generated in India ends up in landfills. Local authorities should start working with their partners to promote source separation. While this is being achieved and recycling is increased, provisions should be made to handle the non-recyclable wastes that are and will be generated in the future (20). A sustainable solution to handle non-recyclable waste is energy recovery. Energy recovery from wastes falls below material recovery. Landfilling of MSW is equivalent to burying natural resources which could be used as secondary raw materials or as sources of energy. However, in the present society, landfills are required as a small fraction of wastes will have to be landfilled. However, unsanitary landfilling or open dumping of wastes is not considered as an option to handle MSW and is not at all recommended.
2.3 MATERIAL RECOVERY

2.3.1 RECYCLING

Reducing and reusing are the most effective ways to prevent generation of wastes. Once the wastes are generated and collected, the best alternative to handle them would be recycling where the materials generally undergo a chemical transformation. Sometimes, reusing can also happen after collection, in cases where informal traders collect materials of no use from households, reshape or repair them and sell in second-hand markets. Unlike reusing a used material, recycling involves using the waste as raw material to make new products. Recycling thus offsets the use of virgin raw materials. It is known that as much as 95% of a products environmental impact occurs before its discarded (21), most of it during its manufacturing and extraction of virgin raw materials. Thus, recycling is pivotal in reducing the overall life cycle impacts of a material on environment and public health. Recycling however requires a separated stream of waste, whether source separated or separated later on (after collection). Due to the limitations for source separation (See Section 5.6), wastes are collected in a mixed form which is referred to as municipal solid waste (MSW). Once the wastes are mixed it becomes difficult to separate them. Recyclables can still be separated manually to some extent. Such separation and sale of recyclables from mixed wastes provides livelihood to marginalized urban populations in low and middle income countries. High income countries use machines to do the same but they would need the recyclables to be collected as a separate dry stream without mixing with organic food wastes.

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The separated stocks of paper, plastic, glass and metal can then be recycled. A hundred percent separation of these materials from MSW is highly energy and time intensive and is generally not carried out. Therefore, mixing of waste will always result in a fraction of residues, which can neither be recycled nor composted and needs to be combusted in RDF or WTE plants to avoid landfilling, and generate energy. Refer to Section 5.1.1 to check conformance of present recycling system in India with the hierarchy of sustainable waste management.
2.3.2 AEROBIC COMPOSTING

Similar to the recycling of inorganic materials, source separated organic wastes can be composted and the compost obtained can be used as an organic fertilizer on agricultural fields. Organic compost is rich in plant macro nutrients like Nitrogen, Phosphorous and Potassium, and other essential micro nutrients. Advantages of using organic manure in agriculture are well established and are a part of public knowledge.

Box 1, SOURCES OF URBAN ORGANIC WASTES


Household waste Food waste from restaurants, hotels and food joints Vegetable market & slaughterhouse waste Livestock & poultry waste Sewage sludge

United Nations Environment Program (UNEP) defines composting as the biological decomposition of biodegradable solid waste under predominantly aerobic conditions to a state that is sufficiently stable for nuisance-free storage and handling and is satisfactorily matured for safe use in agriculture. Composting can also be defined as human intervention into the natural process of decomposition as noted by Cornell Waste Management Institute. The biological decomposition accomplished by microbes during the process involves oxidation of carbon present in the organic waste. Energy released during oxidation is the cause for rise in temperatures in windrows during composting. Due to this energy loss, aerobic composting falls below anaerobic composting on the hierarchy of waste management. Anaerobic composting recovers energy and compost and is discussed in detail in Section 2.4.1. Life cycle impacts of extracting virgin raw materials and manufacturing make material recovery options like recycling and composting the most environment friendly methods to handle waste. They are positioned higher on the hierarchy compared to other beneficial waste handling options like energy recovery. However, quality of the compost product depends upon the quality of input waste. Composting mixed wastes results in low

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quality compost, which is less beneficial and has the potential to introduce heavy metals into human food chain. Aerobic composting of mixed waste results in a compost contaminated by organic and inorganic materials, mainly heavy metals. Contamination of MSW compost by heavy metals can cause harm to public health and environment and is the major concern leading to its restricted agricultural use (22). Mixed waste composting is therefore not an option for sustainable waste management, but this issue is not a part of public knowledge. Mixed waste composting is widely practiced and is considered better (if not best) (8) in countries like India where more than 91% of MSW is landfilled and there are no other alternatives. It is considered better probably because public health and environmental impacts of unsanitary landfilling are more firmly established by research than those impacts due to heavy metal contamination of MSW compost. Refer to Section 5.2.1 to check the conformance of aerobic composting and mechanical biological treatment in India with the hierarchy of sustainable waste management.
2.4 ENERGY RECOVERY

Energy requirements of a community can be satiated to some extent by energy recovery from wastes as a better alternative to landfilling. Energy recovery is a method of recovering the chemical energy in MSW. Chemical energy stored in wastes is a fraction of input energy expended in making those materials. Due to the difference in resources (materials/energy) that can be recovered, energy recovery falls below material recovery on the hierarchy of waste management.
2.4.1 ANAEROBIC DIGESTION

The USEPA defines Anaerobic Digestion (AD) as a process where microorganisms break down organic materials, such as food scraps, manure and sewage sludge, in the absence of oxygen. In the context of SWM, anaerobic digestion (also called Anaerobic Composting or Biomethanation) is a method to treat source separated organic waste to recover energy in the form of biogas, and compost in the form of a liquid residual. Biogas consists of methane and carbon dioxide and can be used as fuel or, by using a generator it can be converted to electricity on-site. The liquid slurry can be used as organic fertilizer. The ability to recover energy and compost from organics puts AD above aerobic composting on the hierarchy of waste management.

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Similar to aerobic composting, AD needs a feed stream of source separated organic wastes. AD of mixed wastes is not recommended because contaminants in the feed can upset the process. Lack of source separated collection systems, and public awareness and involvement strike off large scale AD from feasible SWM options in India. However, AD on a small scale (called small scale biogas) has emerged as an efficient and decentralized method of renewable energy generation, and waste diversion from landfills. It also reduces green house gas emissions by using methane as an energy source which would otherwise be emitted from landfilling waste. Refer to Section 5.3 to check the conformance of small scale anaerobic digestion in India with the hierarchy of sustainable waste management.
2.4.2 REFUSE DERIVED FUEL (RDF)

Refuse Derived Fuel refers to the segregated high calorific fraction of processed MSW. RDF can be defined as the final product from waste materials which have been processed to fulfill guideline, regulatory or industry specifications mainly to achieve a high calorific value to be useful as secondary/substitute fuels in the solid fuel industry (23). RDF is mainly used as a substitute to coal (a fossil fuel) in high-energy industrial processes like power production, cement kilns, steel manufacturing, etc, where RDFs use can be optimized to enhance economic performance (23). The organic fraction (including paper) in RDF is considered to be a bio-fuel and is thus renewable. Since the carbon dioxide released by burning the organic fraction of RDF arises from plant and animal material, the net green house gas (GHG) emissions are zero (Section 4.7). The overall green house emissions from RDF are however not zero. This is due to carbon emissions from burning the plastics fraction left in RDF. The amount of GHG emissions from RDF depends upon the composition or organics and plastics in the MSW stream it is being processed from. Using RDF prevents GHG emissions from landfills, displaces fossil fuels, and reduces the volume of waste that needs to be landfilled, thus increasing their operating life. On the hierarchy of waste management, RDF is placed below aerobic composting, as a waste to energy technology. It is a slight variant of the waste-to-energy combustion (WTE) technology, which combusts MSW (processed or as it is) to generate electricity. RDF is different because the objective is to increase the calorific value by processing the fuel. Refer to Section 5.4 to check the conformance of RDF technology in India with the hierarchy of sustainable waste management.

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2.4.3 WASTE-TO-ENERGY COMBUSTION (WTE)

Waste-to-Energy combustion (WTE) is defined as a process of controlled combustion, using an enclosed device to thermally breakdown combustible solid waste to an ash residue that contains little or no combustible material and that produces, electricity, steam or other energy as a result (24). Even though both WTE combustion and RDF combust MSW, the objective of WTE combustion is treating MSW to reduce its volume. Generating energy and electricity only adds value to this process. As discussed in Section 2.4.1, combusting the organic fraction of MSW (a bio-fuel) and releasing carbon dioxide as the end product is a net zero emissions process (Section 4.7). Due to the dominance of organic waste in MSW, MSW is considered as a bio-fuel which can be replenished by agriculture. Also, bio-fuels are renewable. In India, urban MSW contains as much as 60% organic fraction and 10% paper. Therefore, potentially, 70% of energy from WTE plants is renewable energy. Therefore, WTE is recognized as a renewable energy technology by the Government of India (GOI). Australia, Denmark, Japan, Netherlands and the US also recognize WTE as a renewable energy technology (15). Thermal waste to energy technologies are the only solutions to handling mixed wastes. In whatever way mixed wastes are treated, the impurities in it will pollute air, water and land resources. By aerobically composting mixed wastes, the heavy metals and other impurities leach into the compost and are distributed through the compost supply chain. In contrast, WTE is a point source pollution control technology, where the impurities in the input mixed waste are captured using extensive pollution control technologies (Table 18) and can be handled separately. The bottom ash from WTE combustion contains nothing but inert inorganic materials and minerals which could be used to make bricks and other construction material. The fly ash from WTE contains pollutants from the input stream and needs to be disposed off in sanitary landfills. By controlling the types of materials fed in to the boiler, European and Japanese WTE plants are known to have achieved nearly zero emissions in the fly ash too. WTE combustion decreases the volume of wastes by up to 90%. Such reduction in volume would prolong the life of a 20 years landfill to 200 years. However, MSW should be combusted after all possible recycling and composting has been done. The input to WTE plants should be the rejects from material recovery and/or composting facilities. Such an integrated system can decrease the amount of wastes landfilled and prolong the life of landfills further. Therefore, WTE combustion is placed below recycling, aerobic and anaerobic digestion on the hierarchy of sustainable waste management.

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Refer to Section 5.5 to check the conformance of WTE technology in India with the hierarchy of sustainable waste management.
2.5 SANITARY LANDFILLING

United Nations Environmental Program (UNEP) defines sanitary landfilling as the controlled disposal of wastes on land in such a way that contact between waste and the environment is significantly reduced and wastes are concentrated in a well defined area. Sanitary landfills (SLFs) are built to isolate wastes from the environment and render them innocuous through the biological, chemical and physical processes of nature. UNEP also recognizes three basic conditions to be fulfilled to be designated as an SLF: a) Compaction of the wastes, b) Daily covering of wastes (with soil or other material) and c) Control and prevention of negative impacts on public health and environment. On the hierarchy of waste management, sanitary landfilling is expanded into three different categories a) SLFs recovering and using methane (CH4) b) SLFs recovering and flaring CH4 c) SLFs without any CH4 recovery SLFs are categorized depending upon their ability to control and prevent negative impacts on environment, from a climate change perspective. They occupy the three positions after WTE technologies on the hierarchy of waste management (Figure 10). Handling CH4 generated during anaerobic digestion of organics dictates where each type of landfill is placed on the hierarchy of waste management. Organic waste in landfills undergoes both aerobic and anaerobic digestion depending upon oxygen availability. Majority of the waste on the top undergoes aerobic digestion due to greater oxygen availability. Waste which is inside SLFs undergoes anaerobic digestion due to reduced oxygen availability. The final gaseous product of aerobic digestion is CO2, which results in a net zero emission (Section 4.7). However, the final gaseous product of anaerobic digestion is CH4 , which if captured can be used as a fuel, generating renewable energy and converting the carbon in CH4 to CO2 , thus resulting in a net zero emissions. In a business as usual scenario (BAU) in India and elsewhere, the CH4 is let out into the atmosphere and not captured. CH4 is a green house gas (GHG), with twenty one (21) times Page | 46

more global warming potential than CO2 (over a long time period). Therefore, every CH4 molecule released from a landfill has 21 times the potential to warm the planet than CO2. Thus, capturing and flaring CH4 is environmentally preferred to sanitary landfilling without capturing CH4. However, landfilling of materials should be the last option considered for disposing wastes in an integrated waste management system. Also, currently, the implementation and practice of sanitary landfilling are severely constrained in economically developing countries (like India) by the lack of reliable information specific to these countries (25).
2.6 UNSANITARY LANDFILLING AND OPEN DUMPING

There is no specific definition for unsanitary landfilling. However, it is generally characterized by open dumping of wastes, lack of monitoring of the site, stray animals and birds feeding on the wastes, absence of leachate or methane collection systems and wastes exposed to natural elements. The direct implications of landfilling include burying materials which were extracted by energy and infrastructure intensive and in most cases environmentally harmful methods and in turn depleting earths natural resources. From an energy recovery perspective, landfilling is equivalent to burying barrels of oil. Apart from these moral implications, landfilling causes extensive public health and environmental damage. Landfills create unsanitary conditions in the surroundings, attract pests and directly impact human health. Unsanitary landfills also contaminate ground and surface water resources when the leachate produced percolates to the water table or is washed as runoff during rains. Unmonitored landfills catch fires due to methane generation and heat and result in uncontrolled combustion of wastes, releasing harmful gases like carbon monoxide, hydrocarbons and particulate matter into low level atmosphere. In addition to these harmful impacts, unsanitary landfills contribute to Climate Change by releasing methane, a green house gas (GHG) with 21 times more global warming potential than carbon dioxide (in the first year of release, methane is 71 times more potent than carbon dioxide as a GHG).

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STATUS OF CURRENT WASTE HANDLING PRACTICES IN INDIA


Table 9, Status of Present Waste Handling Techniques in India

S.No

City

MSW Generated (TPD) 12,060 11,645 11,558 6,404 5,154 3,501 2,724 2,636 1,839 1,815 1,431 1,426 1,311 1,250 1,167 1,069 989 919 908 853 841 838 825 778 747 739 720 711 702 698 634

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31

Greater Kolkata Greater Mumbai Delhi Chennai Greater Hyderabad Greater Bengaluru Pune Ahmadabad Kanpur Surat Kochi Jaipur Coimbatore Greater Visakhapatnam Ludhiana Agra Patna Bhopal Indore Allahabad Meerut Nagpur Jodhpur Lucknow Srinagar Varanasi Vijayawada Amritsar Aurangabad Faridabad Vadodara

700 370 825 YES 40* 450 600 YES YES YES YES NO YES NO NO NO YES 100 YES NO NO YES 216 YES YES NO YES NO YES NO YES

NO 80* NO NO 700* NO NO NO NO NO NO 500 NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO 225* NO NO NO NO

NO YES NO NO NO NO YES NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO YES NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO

NO NO NO NO NO NO YES YES NO YES NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO YES NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO

YES YES NO YES NO NO YES YES YES YES NO YES YES NO NO NO NO NO NO YES NO NO YES NO NO NO NO YES NO NO YES

NO YES YES NO YES NO YES YES NO YES NO YES NO YES NO YES NO YES YES YES NO NO YES YES NO NO YES YES NO NO NO

YES YES YES YES YES YES YES YES YES YES YES YES YES YES YES YES YES YES YES YES YES YES YES YES YES YES YES YES YES YES YES

Biomethanation NO YES YES NO NO NO YES NO NO NO 20** NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO YES NO NO NO YES* NO NO YES NO NO NO NO

Sanitary Landfill

Uncontrolled Dumping

LFG recovery

Composting

Alignment/ Compaction

Earth Cover

RDF/ WTE

S.No

City

MSW Generated (TPD) 578 568 567 559 554 539 509 489 477 462 455 424 398 373 345 340 332 331 322 313 305 266 264 259 258 208 64,845

32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57

Mysore Madurai Pimpri Chinchwad Jammu Jalandhar Jamshedpur Chandigarh Bhiwandi Gwalior Tiruppur Navi Mumbai Mangalore Jabalpur Bhubaneswar Nashik Ranchi Rajkot Raipur Thiruvananthapuram Guntur Kolhapur Bhavnagar Udaipur Dehradun Guwahati Jalgaon TOTAL TONNAGE Count

YES NO YES NO 350 40 YES YES 120 YES NO NO NO NO 300 NO YES YES 150 NO YES YES YES NO NO 100 4,361 38

NO NO NO NO NO NO 500 NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO 300* NO NO 275* NO NO NO NO NO NO 1,680 6

NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO

NO NO NO NO NO NO YES NO NO NO YES YES NO NO YES NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO

NO NO NO NO NO YES YES NO NO NO YES YES NO NO YES NO YES NO YES NO NO NO NO YES NO NO

NO NO NO NO NO YES YES NO NO NO YES YES NO NO YES NO NO NO YES NO NO NO NO YES YES NO

YES YES YES YES YES YES YES YES YES YES YES YES YES YES YES YES YES YES YES YES YES YES YES YES YES YES

NO NO NO NO NO NO YES NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO 20 ** NO NO NO NO NO NO NO

21

24

59

This report has updated the Status of Cities and state capitals in implementation of MSW (Management and Handling) Rules, 2000, jointly published by the Central Pollution Control Board (CPCB) and the National Environmental Engineering Research Institute (NEERI), with respect to waste disposal options. The original table was published by Sunil Kumar, et al. in the paper Assessment of the Status of Municipal Solid Waste Management in Metro Cities, State Capitals, Class I Cities and Class II Towns in India: An Insight (1). This updated table contains Page | 49

Biomethanation 9

Sanitary Landfill

Uncontrolled Dumping

LFG recovery

Composting

Alignment/ Compaction

Earth Cover

RDF/ WTE

only those cities which generate MSW greater than 200 TPD and have taken significant steps towards proper SWM. Informal recycling has not been included in this table. Most of the recyclable waste is collected by the informal recycling sector in India before it is collected by the formal system. It is assumed that informal waste picking happens in all Indian cities to some extent (Kochi is an exception due to labor laws which prohibit waste picking). Also, the exact percentage of recycling in each of these cities is unknown. However, it is estimated that the informal sector recycles as much as 56% of recyclables generated in large cities and metros, (See Section 5.1.1). The recycling percentage is lower in smaller cities as was observed by Perinaz Bhada, et al (15).
3.1 COMPOSTING OR MECHANICAL BIOLOGICAL TREATMENT (MBT)

On an average, 6% of MSW collected is composted in mechanical biological treatment (MBT) plants across India. MBT is the most widely employed technology to handle MSW in India. Currently, there are more than 70 composting plants in India treating mixed MSW, most of them located in the states of Maharashtra (19), Himachal Pradesh (11), Chhattisgarh (9) and Orissa (7) (Appendix 8). More than 26 new plants are proposed in different cities and towns across India. The first 10 MBT plants built in India are however not in operation anymore. Out of the 57 cities which generate MSW above 200 TPD, 38 cities have composting plants, which treat more than 4,361 TPD of MSW. Table 9 is therefore the first such effort which accounts for about 40% of the current MSW composting capacity in India. Almost all composting/MBT facilities handle mixed wastes. The only known plants which handle source separated organic wastes are in Vijayawada and Suryapet (26). Since almost all these plants handle mixed solid wastes, the percentage of rejects which go to the landfill is very high. During the authors research visit in India, it was observed that only 6-7% of the input MSW is converted into compost. Accounting for moisture and material losses, the remaining 60% which cannot be composted any further is landfilled despite its high energy content (See Section 5.2.4)
3.2 REFUSE DERIVED FUEL (RDF)

There are 6 RDF plants in India, near Hyderabad, Vijayawada, Jaipur, Chandigarh, Mumbai and Rajkot. The plant in Vijayawada used to serve the city of Guntur too. The Hyderabad and Vijayawada plants handled 700 TPD and 500 TPD of MSW to generate 6 MW of electricity respectively. RDF produced in these plants was combusted in specifically designed WTE boilers. The author visited one of these plants and found out that both these facilities are currently not in operation.

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The RDF plants near Jaipur and Chandigarh combust the RDF produced in cement kilns to replace fossil fuels. They handle 500 TPD of MSW each. The author visited the plant in Jaipur and found that it is not operated regularly. The plant in Chandigarh is known to have been dormant too, but it is being retrofitted with MSW drying systems to reduce moisture in the final RDF. The RDF plant in Rajkot handles 300 TPD of waste. Other than this information, there is not much known about this plant; its present operational status is unknown too. It is the same case with the small scale RDF plant in Mumbai, which produces RDF pellets by processing 80 TPD of MSW (See Section 5.4).
3.3 WASTE-TO-ENERGY COMBUSTION (WTE)

There are no WTE mass burn combustion plants currently in operation in India. Only two such plants were built in India until now. The latest one among them has finished construction on the Okhla landfill site, New Delhi and is about to start operations. An earlier WTE plant, which was built in Timarpur, New Delhi is not in operation anymore. The two WTE plants in Hyderabad and Vijayawada are not mass burn combustion. They combust RDF produced after considerable processing of MSW, and addition of secondary biomass fuels like rice husk. Therefore they are RDF-WTE plants.
3.4 SANITARY LANDFILLS

On comparing Table 9 with the original publication (Comparison in Appendix 3), it was observed that the number of SLFs is gradually increasing. Eight cities now have SLFs as compared to zero SLFs out of 74 cities studied. The eight cities with SLFs are Pune, Ahmadabad, Surat, Jodhpur, Chandigarh, Navi Mumbai, Mangalore and Nashik. The author visited the landfill facility at Nashik and observed that there were no precautions taken to handle landfill fires, which were found to be common at the facility (See Section 4.2). In addition to the 8 cities with SLFs, an additional 13 (total 21) cities apply earth cover over the wastes dumped and an additional 15 cities (total 24) compact or align the wastes. The frequency of applying earth cover on wastes is not known. LFG recovery from landfills has also been attempted at landfills in Mumbai and Pune. A study by USEPAs Methane to Markets program found methane recovery from only 7 landfills (in 4 cities) to be economically feasible (Table 10). UNEP recommends [sanitary landfilling] is well suited to developing countries (like India) as a means of managing the disposal of wastes because of the flexibility and relative simplicity of the technology. This recommendation does not take into consideration the high maintaining

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and operating costs of SLFs and the need for SWM projects to sustain themselves. Most sanitary landfills built in developing nations eventually fail due to high operating costs. A system where majority of the waste generated is planned to reach the landfill will lack robust cost recovery mechanisms. In such a case, the only cost recovery mechanism possible would be tipping fees, which will require increasing or levying user charges/taxes, which many ULBs cannot implement. Sanitary landfilling systems should be designed as an addition to recycling, composting or WTE facilities, which sustain themselves financially.
Table 10, Landfill Gas Recovery Feasibility in Indian Landfills; Source: Methane to Markets

Dumpsite Name

City

LFG Feasibility Yes No Yes Yes No No Yes No No No Yes Yes Yes 7

Total Waste (million tons) 680,000 637,732 12,700,000 9,300,000 1,200,000 280,000 2,340,000 473,457 287,100 288,500 6,900,000 11,000,000 10,000,000

Area

Waste depth (m)

Okhla Karuvadikuppam Deonar Pirana Autonagar Uruli Devachi Gorai Shadra Barikalan Dubagga Moti Jheel Bhalswa Dhapa Gazipur Count: 13

Delhi Pondicherry Mumbai Ahmadabad Hyderabad Pune Mumbai Agra Lucknow Lucknow Delhi Kolkata New Delhi 9

Minimum Maximum 54 20 30 7 120 3 22 55 22.5 18.2 5 10 22.5 5 12.5 24 10.2 5 12 2.78 12.9 3.3 8.8 22.3 18 31.5 30 25 25.5

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IMPROPER SOLID WASTE MANAGEMENT (WASTE DISPOSAL)

ULBs spend about $10 30 (INR 500 1,500) per ton on SWM. About 60-70% of this amount is spent on collection, 20-30% on transportation. No financial resources are allotted for scientific disposal of waste (6) (7). Despite the fairly high expenditure, the present level of service in many urban areas is so low as to be a potential threat to the public health and environmental quality (4). A guidance note titled Municipal Solid Waste Management on a Regional Basis, by the Ministry of Urban Development (MOUD), Government of India (GOI) observes that Compliance with the MSW Rules 2000 requires that appropriate systems and infrastructure facilities be put in place to undertake scientific collection, management, processing and disposal of MSW. However, authorities are unable to implement and sustain separate and independent projects to enable scientific collection, management, processing and disposal of MSW. This is mainly due to lack of financial and technical expertise and scarcity of resources, such as land and manpower. Improper solid waste management deteriorates public health, degrades quality of life, and pollutes local air, water and land resources. It also causes global warming and climate change and impacts the entire planet. Improper waste management is also identified as a
BOX 2, IMPACTS OF IMPROPER SOLID WASTE MANAGEMENT

Sources: (21), CPCB


1. Improper solid waste management causes a. Air Pollution, b. Water Pollution and c. Soil Pollution. 2. MSW clogs drains, creating a. stagnant water for insect breeding and b. floods during rainy seasons 3. Greenhouse gases are generated from the decomposition of organic wastes in landfills. 4. Insect and rodent vectors are attracted to the waste and can spread diseases such as cholera and dengue fever. 5. Some Health Problems linked to improper solid waste management are, a. Nose & throat infections, b. Lung infection, c. Breathing problems, d. Infection, Inflammation, e. High PM10 exposure, f. High pollution load, g. Bacterial infections, h. Obstruction in airways, i. Elevated mucus production, j. Covert lung hemorrhage, k. Chromosome break, l. Anemia, m. Cardiovascular risk, n. Altered immunity, o. Allergy, asthma and p. Other infections.

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cause of 22 human diseases (21) and results in numerous premature deaths every year. Indiscriminate dumping of wastes and leachate from landfills contaminates surface and groundwater supplies and the surrounding land resources. It also clogs sewers and drains and leads to floods. Mumbai experienced a flood in 2006 which was partly due to clogged sewers. Insect and rodent vectors are attracted to MSW and can spread diseases such as cholera, dengue fever and plague. Using water polluted by solid waste for bathing, food irrigation, and as drinking water can also expose individuals to disease organisms and other contaminants (21). The city Surat has experienced a city-wide bubonic plague epidemic in 1994 due to improper SWM. Open burning of MSW on streets and at landfills, along with landfill fires emit 22,000 tons of pollutants into the lower atmosphere of Mumbai city, every year. The pollutants identified in Mumbai due to uncontrolled burning of wastes are carbon monoxide (CO), carcinogenic hydro carbons (HC) (includes dioxins and furans), particulate matter (PM), nitrogen oxides (NO x) and sulfur dioxide (SO2) (5). MSW dumped in landfills also generates green house gases like methane, which has 21 times more global warming potential than carbon dioxide. Improper SWM contributes to 6% of Indias methane emissions and is the third largest emitter of methane in India. This is much higher than the global average of 3% methane emissions from solid waste. It currently produces 16 million tons of CO2 equivalents per year and this number is expected to rise to 20 million tons of CO2 equivalents by 2020 (27). The world is moving towards calling wastes as resources. Due to the inability to manage these resources in the next decade, India will landfill 6.7 million tons of recyclables (or secondary raw materials); 9.6 million tons of compost (or organic fertilizer); and resources equivalent to 57.2 million barrels of oil. Efforts towards proper SWM were made by ULBs equipped with financial and managerial capacity to improve waste management practices in response to MSW Rules 2000 (9). Despite these efforts to manage wastes, more than 91% of MSW collected is still landfilled or dumped on open lands and dumps (7), impacting public health, deteriorating quality of life and causing environmental pollution. It is estimated that about 2% of the uncollected wastes are burnt openly on the streets; and about 10% of the collected MSW is openly burnt in landfills or is caught in landfill fires (5) (See Section 4.2). The MSW collection efficiency in major metro cities still ranges between 70 - 90% of waste generated, whereas smaller cities and towns collect less than 50% of waste generated (6).

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4.1

UNSANITARY LANDFILLING (DUMPING)

Figure 11, Open Dump near Jaipur: Half of Jaipur Citys MSW Reaches this Site

Majority of the MSW collected in India is disposed off on open land or in unsanitary landfills (Figure 11). This is in addition to the irregular and incomplete waste collection and transportation in many cities, which leaves MSW on the streets. Many municipalities in India have not yet identified landfill sites in accordance with MSW Rules 2000. In several municipalities, existing landfill sites have been exhausted and the respective local bodies do not have resources to acquire new land. Such a lack of landfill sites decreases MSW collection efficiency (7). Unsanitary landfilling pollutes ground and surface waters, emits green house gases and other organic aerosols and pollutes the air. Pests and other vectors feeding on improperly disposed solid wastes is a nuisance and above that a breeding ground for disease causing organisms. For land requirements to landfill MSW, see Section 4.4.

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4.2

OPEN BURNING, LANDFILL FIRES & AIR QUALITY DETERIORATION

Open burning is the burning of any matter in such a manner that products of combustion resulting from the burning are emitted directly into the ambient (surrounding outside) air without passing through an adequate stack, duct or chimney (5). Open burning of wastes is practiced all over India due to reasons like a) open burning by waste-pickers for recovery of metals from mixed wastes; b) open burning in bins by municipal workers or residents to empty MSW collection bins(Figure 12); c) open burning of plastic wastes by street dwellers for warmth at night (Figure 14). In addition to open burning of wastes, landfill fires are also common at every landfill in India (Figure 13). Landfill fires were observed at Pimpri-Chinchwad (unsanitary), Nashik and Vishakhapatnam (unsanitary) landfills. They are caused due to the build-up of heat inside waste beds due to decomposing (aerobic or anaerobic) organic matter. Sometimes, these fires continue for weeks at a stretch, even after long showers.

Figure 12, Open Burning of MSW Inside a Garbage Bin on the Street in a High Density Residential Area in Hyderabad

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Figure 13, Landfill Fire at a Sanitary Landfill in India

Figure 14, Waste Picker Burning Refuse for Warmth at Night, Chandini Chowk, Delhi

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The author observed refuse being used as a fuel by street dwellers to keep warm during nights (Figure 14). Lit refuse fires were observed frequently in Delhi while author was touring the streets in late January, 2011. Refuse and other biomass burning have been on the rise, as large slum populations do not have adequate kerosene and LPG supply at affordable costs. Slum dwellers use all kind of combustible refuse for burning (5).
4.2.1 AIR EMISSIONS FROM OPEN BURNING AND LANDFILL FIRES

A 2010 study by NEERI, Air Quality Assessment, Emissions Inventory and Source Apportionment Studies: Mumbai found out that open burning and landfill fires are a major source of air pollution in Mumbai. The study found that about 2% of the total MSW generated in Mumbai is openly burnt on the streets and 10% of the total MSW generated is burnt in landfills by humans or due to landfill fires. In Mumbai, open burning of MSW is (Appendix 4, Table 11, Figure 16, Figure 17, Figure 18, Figure 19)
1. the largest emitter of carbon monoxide (CO), particulate matter (PM), carcinogenic

2. 3. 4. 5.

hydrocarbons (HC) and nitrous oxides (NOx), among activities that do not add to the economy of the city; the second largest emitter of hydrocarbons (HC); the second largest emitter of particulate matter (PM); the fourth largest emitter of carbon monoxide compared to all emissions sources in Mumbai; and the third largest emitter of CO, PM and HC combined together in comparison to all emission sources in the city .

Open burning contributes to 19% of air pollution due to CO, PM and HC in Mumbai (Figure 19). More than twice as much particulate matter is emitted by open burning of MSW as compared to emissions from road transportation in Mumbai. Also, a quarter of volatile hydrocarbons entering the atmosphere in Mumbai are a result of such activity. MSW is combusted on the streets, exposing millions of urban Indians directly to these emissions every day. MSW burning in the landfill happens in areas with lesser population but the activity emits pollutants into the lower atmosphere, where the dispersion of pollutants is very low, increasing the risk of exposure to these harmful emissions.

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Figure 15, Open Burning of MSW Releases 22,000 tons per year of CO, HCs, PM, NOx, and SO2 into Mumbais Lower Atmosphere Figure 16, Open burning is a Major Contributor to Carbon Monoxide Pollution in Mumbai

Comparison of Particulate Emissions from all Combustion Sources Industrial in Mumbai,


3% Commercial food sector 16%

Domestic sector 4%

Power plant 37%

Open Burning 24%


Road Transportatio n 10% Crematoria Aircraft & Central & 2% Western Marine Railway Vessels 3% 1%
Figure 17, Open burning is the second largest contributor of Hydrocarbons in Mumbais atmosphere Figure 18, Open burning of MSW is the Second Largest Source of Particulate Matter Emissions in Mumbai, greater than Road Transportation

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Figure 19, Open burning contributes to 19% of Mumbais Air Pollution due to Carbon Monoxide, Hydrocarbons and Particulate Matter Table 11, Air Emissions Inventory from Open burning and Other Combustion Sources in Mumbai; Source: CPCB, NEERI

Source of Emission PM 2,429.3 564.9 3640 300.7 514.0 77.4 1,544.8 5,628.3 503.7 CO 12,271.1 19,723.7 11374 2,213.0 3,147.0 791.7 18,856.2 3,215.7 879.7

Emissions (tons/year) SO2 315.4 1,262.0 135 7.9 1,449.0 96.7 606.4 24,473.3 28,510.2 NOx 628.5 9,946.9 813 44.4 19,708.0 1,003.4 13,203.1 28,944.5 8,435.2 HC 10,312.9 368.1 5822 1,991.9 33.8 2,427.1 1,266.6 116.8 Total 25,957 31,866 21,784 4,558 24,818 2,003 36,638 63,528 38,446

Commercial food sector Domestic sector Open Burning Crematoria Central & Western Railway Aircraft & Marine Vessels Road Transportation Power plant Industrial

The study identifies that open burning of MSW on streets and landfill sites need to be stopped immediately to increase air quality in Mumbai and points out the need for credible solutions to this problem. The study has calculated that 50% reduction in open burning and a 100% reduction in landfill fires are required to reduce PM pollution in Mumbai by 98%, along with many other initiatives.
4.2.2 DIOXINS/FURANS EMISSIONS

Open burning of MSW and landfill fires emit 10,000 grams of dioxins/furans into Mumbais lower atmosphere every year (5) (28) (Appendix 14). Dioxins and Furans are known carcinogenic agents; they can cause cancer in case of long term exposure. The risk of exposure to dioxins/furans is considerably increased due to the fact that MSW is burnt on the streets and landfills which are at ground level, releasing them into directly into ambient surroundings. Also, open burning is a frequent occurrence in some communities, and Landfill fires, once started, go on for weeks at a stretch, increasing human exposure further. During health studies conducted in Kolkata, waste pickers who are regularly exposed to landfill fire emissions for longer periods were found to have a Chromosome Break incidence which was 12 times higher than the control population. Chromosome Break often leads to cancer. Municipality workers were also found to have higher incidence of Chromosome Break compared to control population, but less than that of waste pickers. Health and environmental impacts of open burning are less known to the public and environmental organizations also often ignore open burning as a source of dioxins/furans emissions.
4.3 WATER POLLUTION

Unsanitary landfills can contaminate ground and surface water resources when the leachate produced percolates through the soil strata into the groundwater underneath or is washed as runoff during rains. Leachate is generally a strong reducing liquid formed under methanogenic (anaerobic) conditions. The characteristics of leachate depend on the content of various constituents in the dumped waste (4). Studies on Environmental Quality in and around Municipal Solid Waste Dumpsite in Kolkata, by Biswas A.K., et al. found moderately high concentrations of heavy metal in groundwater surround the dumpsite. The study found out that the groundwater quality has been significantly affected by leachate percolation. Leachate generally contains organic chemicals formed by anaerobic digestion of organic wastes and heavy metals leached from inorganic wastes. The heavy metals generally observed in Page | 62

leachate are Lead (Pb), Cadmium (Cd), Chromium (Cr) and Nickel (Ni). All these heavy metals are characterized as toxic for drinking water. Due to the reducing property of leachate, during percolation through soil strata, it reacts with Iron (Fe) and Manganese (Mn) species underground and reduces them into more soluble species, thus increasing their concentrations in groundwater (4). Such reactions when they occur, pose a serious drinking water toxic risk. These predictions are substantiated by studies which found high concentrations of Cr, Cd and Mn in groundwater due to leachate percolation. Nitrates present in the environment can also be reduced to nitrites due to leachate. Nitrites consumed through drinking water can oxidize haemoglobin (Hb) in the blood to methaemoglobin (met Hb), thereby inhibiting the transportation of oxygen around the body (4). The study clearly establishes that unsanitary landfills in India and elsewhere are potential sources of heavy metals contamination in groundwater sources adjoining the landfills. It also points out that there is an urgent need to adopt credible solutions to control water pollution due to indiscriminate dumping of wastes.
4.4 LAND DEGRADATION AND SCARCITY

Landfilling of municipal solid waste (MSW) is a common waste management practice and one of the cheapest methods for organized waste management in many parts of the world (4). This practice of unsanitary landfilling not only occupies precious land resources near urban areas; it also degrades the quality of land and soil in the site. Presence of plastics and heavy metals in the soils make it unfit for agriculture and emissions of methane and structural instability of the land make it unfit for construction activities. It would require massive remediation efforts which are time and infrastructure intensive, to make the land useful. Landfilling occupies vast amount of lands near urban areas. A 1998 study by TERI (The Energy Resources Institute, earlier Tata Energy Research Institute) titled Solid Waste Management in India: options and opportunities calculated the amount of land that was occupied by all the waste that was generated in India post-Independence until 1997. The study compared the land occupied in multiples of the size of a football field and arrived at 71,000 football fields of solid waste, stacked 9 meters high. Based on a business as usual (BAU) scenario of 91% landfilling, the study estimates that the waste generated
1. by 2001 has occupied 237.4 sq.km or an area half the size of Mumbai; 2. by 2011 would have occupied 379.6 sq.km or more than 218,000 football fields or 90%

of Chennai, the fourth largest Indian city area-wise;

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3. by 2021 would need 590.1 sq.km which is greater than the area of Hyderabad (583

sq.km), the largest Indian city area-wise (18) (19). The Position Paper on The Solid Waste Management Sector in India, published by Ministry of Finance in 2009, estimates a requirement of more than 1400 sq.km of land for solid waste disposal by the end of 2047 if MSW is not properly handled. This area is equal to the area of Hyderabad, Mumbai and Chennai together. 17 cities out of 59 surveyed by Central Pollution Control Board, CPCB have proposed new sites for landfills (Appendix 9). 24 cities (23.4 million TPY) use 34 landfills for dumping their waste, covering an area of 1,900 hectares (Table 12).
Table 12, Area Occupied by Known Landfills in India; Source: CPCB

Name of city Chennai Coimbatore Surat Greater Mumbai Greater Hyderabad Ahmadabad Delhi Jabalpur Indore Madurai Greater Bengaluru Greater Visakhapatnam Ludhiana Nashik Jaipur Srinagar Kanpur Kolkata Chandigarh Ranchi Raipur Meerut Guwahati Thiruvananthapuram Total

No. of landfill Area of sites landfill (ha) 2 2 1 3 1 1 3 1 1 1 2 1 1 1 3 1 1 1 1 1 1 2 1 1 465.5 292 200 140 121.5 84 66.4 60.7 59.5 48.6 40.7 40.5 40.4 34.4 31.4 30.4 27 24.7 18 15 14.6 14.2 13.2 12.15 1894.85

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The concept of regional landfills used in western countries is very relevant to India to overcome the challenges of siting new landfills, lack of financial and human resources in every ULB. The state of Gujarat has identified many regional landfills. The first attempt at developing a regional facility in India was by Ahmadabad Urban Development Authority (AUDA), in 2007, to address the SWM requirements of 11 towns in its (then) jurisdiction. Located at the village Fatehwadi, the facility integrated composting facilities for approximately 150 TPD (9). Each regional landfill will act as a common dumping site for MSW from a cluster of ULBs. Regional landfills make it easy to share financial and human resources between ULBs and facilitates proper sanitary landfill disposal of wastes. Sanitary landfills which are otherwise very costly to be built and maintained by individual ULBs are made economical by scaling up landfill operations.
4.5 PUBLIC HEALTH CRISIS

The present level of SWM service in urban areas is a potential threat to public health and environment (4). Inhalation of bioaerosols, and of smoke and fumes produced by open burning of waste, can cause health problems. Also, the exposure to air-borne bacteria is infectious. Toxic materials present in solid waste are determinants for respiratory and dermatological problems, eye infections and low life expectancy (16). The carbonaceous fractions and toxic elements like Cr, Pb, Zn, etc. dominate the fine particle range. As most of the fine particles can possibly enter the human respiratory systems, their potency for health damage is high. Also, these fine particles from open burning which constitute higher fractions of toxics are mostly released at ground level (5). On comparing emissions from open burning to the concentrations and composition of emissions causing indoor air pollution due to bio-fuel burning inside homes (28), it can be concluded that emissions from open burning also cause numerous premature deaths in the populations exposed, but there is no data available on this subject. A less observed side effect of improper SWM in India is the introduction of heavy metals into the food chain. Compost from mixed waste composting plants is highly contaminated with heavy metals. Using this compost on agricultural fields will result in contamination of the agricultural soil with heavy metals. Food crops grown on contaminated agricultural soils when consumed will introduce the heavy metals into the food chain and lead to a phenomenon called biomaginification. Biomaginification is defined by United States Geological Survey (USGS) as the process whereby the tissue concentrations of a contaminant (heavy metals) increases as it passes up the food chain through two or more trophic levels (plants and humans or plants, cattle and humans). Heavy metals generally found in mixed waste composts are Zinc (Zn), Copper (Cu), Cadmium (Cd), Lead (Pb), Nickel (Ni) and Chromium (Cr).

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Long-term exposure to these heavy metals through food can cause severe health damage. Heavy metals in human body are known to cause damage to the central nervous system and circulatory system, liver and kidney dysfunction, anemia, stomach and intestinal irritation and psychological and developmental changes in young children. However additional research is required to properly understand the transport pathways of heavy metals into human bodies through different agricultural crops and meat products. Heavy metal contamination of groundwater due to leachate percolation below unsanitary landfills can also cause biomaginification of heavy metals in humans who drink water from those sources. Long term exposure of populations surrounding dumpsites to open waste disposal can lead to health problems (Box 2). Ill health of municipal workers and waste pickers means a threat to public health. Also, contagious diseases can spread rapidly in densely populated Indian cities posing a bigger threat to public health. Diseases caused due to stray animals, pests and insects attracted to wastes is a threat to public health too. Sewers and drains clogged by solid waste are breeding grounds for mosquitoes. Improper SWM in the city Surat caused a city-wide bubonic plague epidemic in 1994, which later transformed Surat into one of the cleanliest cities in India. Stray animals and insects carry other diseases like cholera and dengue fever (21).
4.6 QUALITY OF LIFE (QOL)

The Global Development Research Center, GDRC defines Quality of Life (QOL) as the product of the interplay among social, health, economic and environmental conditions which affect human and social development. QOL reflects the gap between the hopes and expectations of a person or population and their present experience. In a country like India, which aspires to be a global economic giant, public health and quality of life are degrading everyday with the increasing gap between services required and those provided. India is also considered a sacred nation by the majority of its inhabitants but the streets and open lands in Indian cities are filled with untreated and rotting garbage. The present citizens of India are living at a time of unprecedented economic growth and changing lifestyles. Unsanitary conditions on the streets and air pollution in the cities will widen the gap between their expectations due to the rapidly changing perception of their being and where they belong and the prevailing conditions, resulting in plummeting quality of life. Improper SWM is an everyday nuisance to urban Indians. Uncollected waste on the streets, acts as a breeding ground for street dogs, stray animals and other disease vectors. Urban Indians have to deal with stench on the streets as soon as they leave their homes and have to walk by or drive by open bins and MSW dumps every day. During the rainy season, many urban Indians Page | 66

come across the unpleasant experience of having to walk in ankle height waters mixed with rotting MSW. The author during his research visits in India observed dry solid waste flying with wind, in the streets of Chennai. Living with children in such conditions adds to the trauma of adults that their children have to get exposed to such living conditions. These experiences are very unpleasant and unsettling and they develop a downgraded image of themselves to the citizens. There is a danger that such conditions for a prolonged time impact the sense of community between individuals and encourages indifference to any initiatives taken towards the betterment of the situation (29).

Figure 20, Improper SWM is an Everyday Nuisance to Urban Indians

Such conditions and experiences cause decrease in the work efficiency and disease. The high disease burden due to improper SWM will result in a degraded QOL and in turn disrupts the citizens sense of well being. These cumulatively impact the economy of the urban centers negatively.
4.7 IMPACT ON CLIMATE CHANGE

Solid waste management is the third largest emitter of anthropogenic methane in the world, contributing to 3% of the worlds overall green house gas emissions. In India, SWM is the second largest anthropogenic methane emitter and the largest green house gas emitter among activities which do not add to the economical growth of the country. They contribute 6% to the Page | 67

overall green house gas emissions of 2.4 Giga tons of CO2 equivalents generated by India (27). Presently, an insignificant fraction of methane emitted from solid waste dumpsites is captured in India, rest of it is left into the atmosphere, not captured and unused. Control of GHGs from SWM is considered an achievable goal in the short term, among many other efforts to avert climate change. Anoxic conditions inside landfills result in the anaerobic digestion of organic wastes which produces methane as the final gaseous product. Due to anaerobic reactions, landfills emit methane throughout their life time and also for several years after closure. Methane has high energy content and if captured economically can act as a renewable energy source. In case of unsanitary landfills which do not have methane capture mechanisms installed, the methane is released into the atmosphere. The organic fraction of MSW is made photosynthetically by plants using carbon dioxide absorbed from the atmosphere. Therefore, at the end of their life cycle, carbon dioxide emissions from organic wastes mean a net zero emission. However, since methane has 2 1 times more global warming potential as compared to CO2, methane emissions from organic wastes mean net positive emissions. One ton of methane equals 2 1 tons of CO2 equivalents over a long period of time. In short time periods, CH4 is much more potent than CO2. During the first year of release, CH4 is 71 times more potent than CO2. Therefore, net positive emissions of GHGs in the form of methane warm the planet faster and contribute to global warming and in turn climate change. However, SWM is very infrastructure intensive and expensive and cannot be afforded by all developing nations. Climate change is a problem that will affect every country on this planet and hence it requires concerted efforts. Our planet has reached a position where it is more economical to achieve GHG emission reductions in developing nations as compared to developed nations. This situation has lead to the creation of Clean Development Mechanism (CDM) under the Kyoto Protocol. The countries which have signed the Kyoto Protocol agree to reduce their GHG emissions below certain standards. CDM provides an avenue to developed nations to achieve these standards, by making it easy to buy carbon credits from developing nations. This mechanism therefore has dual benefits of reducing the overall GHG emissions of the planet and also helps improve the facilities in developing nations.

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CONFORMANCE WITH THE HIERARCHY OF SUSTAINABLE WASTE MANAGEMENT

Comparison of SWM in India with the hierarchy of sustainable waste management does not show a very bright situation. It indicates a developing country with a huge population and growing economy and scattered but ongoing efforts towards SWM. There is also a definite awareness among local bodies as well as policy makers on SWM. The SWM sector in India has progressed in the right direction during the last few years (7), specifically after the introduction of Jawaharlal Nehru National Urban Renewal Mission (JnNURM) by the Government of India (GOI). However, it still suffers due to lack of managerial and financial resources and public awareness on the issue. The sector has a long way to go. Changes expected in disposal of MSW in the near future are a. b. c. d. more extensive integration of informal waste sector into the formal systems, further increase in the construction of composting facilities, new RDF, WTE and sanitary landfill facilities and capping of some landfills for landfill gas (LFG) recovery

Further financial and technical assistance from GOI is expected. Academic and scientific research institutions are also expected to increasingly focus on this sector.
5.1 RECYCLING

Recycling of resources from MSW in India is mostly undertaken by the informal sector. The formal recycling set-up in India in a minor fraction and is only in its initial stages, experimenting different models. Informal recycling in developing nations like India is a consequence of the increased gap in waste service provision (16) and the resultant ease of access to secondary raw materials which have immediate economic value.
5.1.1 INFORMAL SECTOR

All recycling in India is entirely undertaken by the informal sector. The informal sector comprises of waste pickers (WPs), itinerant waste buyers, dealers and recycling units. WPs constitute the largest population in the informal sector. Generally, recyclables are collected in two ways; paper, glass and metal are collected before they enter the MSW stream from households on an instant payment basis, by a special group of people called Kabariwala (from here on referred to as itinerant waste buyers) and plastics are generally collected by waste-pickers from litter on streets or from heaps of waste in landfills (30). Shopkeepers sell recyclable items, such as newspaper, cardboard, glass containers, tin cans etc. to itinerant waste buyers too. Waste pickers retrieve recyclable materials like milk Page | 69

bags, plastic cups and containers, glass, etc from what is discarded by households, commercial establishments and industries. Larger commercial establishments and industries sell the recyclable waste (source separated or otherwise) to waste dealers in bulk, who then sell it to recycling units (31).
BOX 3, INFORMAL WASTE MANAGEMENT IN INDIA

Source: (36) The informal recycling sector in India and elsewhere 1. supplements the formal system and subsidizes it in financial terms 2. provides employment to a significant proportion of the population 3. operates competitively and with high levels of efficiency 4. operates profitably generating surplus 5. links up with formal economy at some point in the recycling chain 6. Offsets carbon emissions by making recycling possible and thus reducing the extraction and use of virgin raw materials

The recyclables collected are separated by pickers and collectors on a daily basis and transferred to small, medium and large dealers (Figure 21, Figure 22, Figure 23, Figure 24). Usually, the pickers and collectors sell to small dealers in the slums, near their residence. The small dealers sell the waste to medium or large dealers and finally the waste will be sold to the recycling units (16). There are 1,777 known plastic recycling units in India (32). Most of these known units are located in Tamil Nadu (588), Gujarat (365), Karnataka (302), Kerala (193) and Madhya Pradesh (179). The total number of plastic recycling units (will be much higher) and the capacity of each of these units is unknown. Most of the recyclable waste is collected by the informal recycling sector in India before it is collected by the formal system. The informal sector recycles some percentage of formally collected waste too from transfer stations and dumps. This report estimates that the informal sector recycles 20.7% of recyclables from the formal system (Appendix 4), which compares fairly well with the best recycling percentages achieved around the world. It has to be observed that this number excludes the amount of wastes this sector recycles from MSW prior to collection, which is generally not accounted for and can be as much as four times the quantity recycled from formally collected waste (Appendix 4). This implies an estimated overall recycling percentage of 56% of recyclable wastes generated. This is a very high percentage, considering that the recycling percentages achieved by many infrastructure-intensive centralized waste management systems in Europe and US are only about 30%.

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Figure 21, First Stage of Separation of Recyclables into Plastics, Metals and Glass, after Collection by Waste Pickers

Figure 22, Second Stage of Separation of Plastics into Different Types

Figure 23, Plastic Bottles after Second Stage of Separation

Figure 24, Sorted Metal after Second Stage of Separation

5.1.1.1

COMMUNITY GAIN, CHEAP SERVICE

Waste-pickers and scrap-dealers provide a low-cost service to the community. In Delhi, the informal sector collects and transports about 1,088 TPD of recyclables (33) which would otherwise be the responsibility of the municipality. In doing so, they save $ 17.8 million (INR 795 million) per year in collection and transportation costs to the Municipal Corporation of Delhi (MCD) (33) (34) (35). Similarly, a study named Recycling Livelihoods, made by Deutsche Gesellschaft fr Internationale Zusammenarbeit (GIZ, earlier GTZ), SNDT Women s University and Chintan Environmental Research and Action Group (Chintan) has found that, the informal

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sector effectively subsidizes the formal waste sector to the extent of USD 4.08 million (INR 200.6 million) per year in waste handling costs in Pune city (36).

Figure 25, Secondary Separation of Waste Paper at a Bulk Waste Paper Dealer Shop

In addition to subsidizing the formal sector and in turn the tax payers money, the informal sector also provides an essential service to the community by clearing the streets off waste and augments the collection efficiency of formal systems. The informal recycling sector in Pune is known to handle up to one-thirds of the MSW handled by the formal system (36). Informal recycling also helps reduce the overall life-cycle impacts of materials by helping to recycle them, reducing the need for extraction of virgin raw materials and manufacturing. Recovery of recyclable materials by the informal system is up to 56% (GIZ estimates 89% in Pune (36); other sources and general consensus suggest 70% (37) as compared to the formal sector where no recovery takes place. The sector also provides livelihood to the marginalized populations among urban poor by providing twice as many jobs as the formal system. In Pune city alone, the informal system operates at a net profit of USD 12.7 million (INR 621 million) per year (36). Even though these revenues are not distributed evenly amongst the populations Page | 72

involved in this sector, the average earnings of the least well-off exceed the statutory minimum wage. This sector achieves such high profits by enhancing the value of a unit of plastic (as an example) by 750% before it is even reprocessed (36).
5.1.1.2 ENVIRONMENTAL GAIN, CARBON OFFSETS

In addition to providing a cheap service to the community, the informal recycling sector also contributes towards reducing the global warming effect, since recycling has an obvious greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions reduction. Another study by Chintan in 2009, Cooling Agents estimates that the informal sector avoids 1 million tons of CO2 equivalents of GHG emissions in Delhi alone, by collecting 476 TPD of mixed paper, 510 TPD of mixed plastics, 17 TPD of metals and 85 TPD of glass (Total 1,088 TPD of MSW) (33). Informal recycling also helps reduce the overall life-cycle impacts of materials by helping to recycle them, reducing the need for extraction of virgin raw materials and manufacturing. Recovery of recyclable materials by the informal system is up to 56%. The monetized environmental benefit on account of the informal system is higher than the environmental costs of the formal system. The use of non renewable energy resources in the informal system is minimal.
5.1.1.3 INADEQUACY & UNPREDICTABILITY

The existence of the informal recycling sector in Indian cities is useful to municipal corporations and beneficial to the community and environment. However, at the same time waste pickers are known to burn wastes at landfills (38) in order to recover metals or to keep warm at night. Open burning of wastes by waste-pickers and other people in addition to intentionally or accidentally set landfill fires are a major source of air pollution in Indian cities, emitting particulates, carbon monoxide and organic compounds including toxic dioxins (5). Wastepickers are constantly exposed to emissions, have unhealthy living conditions and are prone to injuries and diseases, all of which decrease their overall life expectancy. The ill-health of waste pickers is a public health problem and even though they are generally not in contact with the public, it poses a threat to the overall health of the community. Informal recycling is only a part of the solution to the MSWM crisis in India. At maximum potential, the informal sector can handle about only 20 - 30% of the generated wastes and also it is absent in cities like Kochi where labor unions do not allow people to work without a membership, which is denied to waste pickers. Though complete absence of the informal recycling is not the case everywhere, this sector is small in many cities. Significant informal Page | 73

recycling occurs in only the largest cities of a state or region. Also, waste-picking at landfills is difficult because of the height/depth of waste heaps. Mixed wastes are dumped in heaps at landfills and limit foraging to the top layers of the heap, leaving those at the bottom untouched. In summary, the Informal recycling sector in its present state is inadequate and unreliable in solving the SWM crisis.

Box 4, HURDLES IN ORGANIZING WASTE PICKERS; UNPREDICTABILITY & UNRELIABILITY

Source: (36) WP organizations are not very extensive geographically across India. Almost all organizations work in only metros and other large cities; WPs are dispersed, argumentative and arrogant at times, street wise and street smart and willing to challenge and ask questions simply because they have nothing to lose being where they are; WPs tend to be migrants who return to their villages during specific periods in the year. Therefore, all organizing and formal work has to take into account this demographic trend, which is very challenging, given the demands of formal service provision; Given the informal nature of work, WPs enjoy flexibility in work schedules. Organizing them becomes additionally challenging as there is no fixed routine within which to intervene and make time for organizing activities; The degree to which a particular material will be recycled depends on income levels; the existence of local and national markets; the need for secondary raw materials; the level of financial and regulatory governmental intervention; prices of virgin materials and the international trade in secondary raw materials and relevant treaties (16) , therefore all recyclables need not necessarily be recycled by the sector and are thus MSW of no value is left on streets or burnt openly.

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5.1.1.4 HEALTH RISK ASSESSMENT OF WASTE-PICKERS

The working conditions for pickers and collectors are unhygienic and safety equipment such as gloves and boots are unaffordable for waste pickers. Thus, the health risks for WPs are high. Due to the lack of safety equipment, (36)
a. 68% of the WPs in Delhi injure themselves regularly, b. 21% injure themselves often

They (WPs) are constantly exposed to stench produced by rotting waste and the smoke and fumes produced by open burning of waste. They are also exposed to air-borne bacteria as well as infectious or toxic materials present in solid waste are determinants for respiratory and dermatological problems, eye infections and low life expectancy. (16)
90 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0
Control Population Waste Pickers MSW Staff

Figure 26, Higher Incidence of all Diseases tested for in waste pickers; Appendix 10

WPs were also found to be suffering from occupation related musculo-skeletal problems, respiratory and gastro-intestinal ailments. 82% of the women waste pickers studied in a health Page | 75

study were found to be severely anemic. This could be not only as a result of malnutrition, but also due to exposure to toxics, particularly heavy metals (36). During a clinical examination of municipal workers, waste pickers and controls conducted in Kolkata, it was found that waste pickers had a higher incidence of all 16 health problems tested for, compared to the control population (CP) and MSW staff (Figure 26). The five most prevalent health problems observed in waste pickers were Cardiovascular risk (77%, around 8 times that of CP), Altered immunity (64%, around 6 times that of CP), Breathing problem (56%, around 3 times that of CP), Nose and throat infections (54%, around 3 times that of CP) and Lung infections (53%, around 3 times that of CP). The increased risk of ailments due to direct exposure to MSW is important to know. The five health problems with increased risk of incidence in WPs are Chromosome break (around 12 times that of CP), Elevated mucus production (11 times that of CP), Covert lung hemorrhage (around 8 times that of CP), Cardiovascular risk and High PM10 exposure (around 7 times that of CP). There is a clear decrease in the incidence and prevalence of health problems among MSW staff workers, as they use better protective wear, take precautions and can easily access other facilities due to the formal nature of their employment. The prevalence of health problems in MSW staff workers is also high compared to the control population and strict measures should be taken by ULBs to improve their health and thus the overall health of the city.
5.1.1.5 RECOGNITION AND INTEGRATION, ORGANIZING THE INFORMAL SECTOR

The informal recycling sector in India is in fact well-structured and has a huge presence, especially in mega cities. This sector is responsible for the recycling of around 70% of plastic waste (37) and up to 56% of all recyclable waste generated in India. On the basis of all information collected during this visit, the author estimates that the informal sector recycles about 10 million tons of recyclable waste per year. The high percentage of recycling the informal sector is able to achieve is the cumulative effort of large numbers of WPs on the streets, at the bins and dumpsites. For example, the informal sector in Delhi employs about 150,000 people who are 0.9 % of the population of Delhi (16.75 million) (3) (33) (39). Equally large populations of waste-pickers are estimated in Mumbai, Kolkata and Chennai. Other cities, such as Bengaluru, Hyderabad and Ahmadabad have slightly lower populations of waste-pickers. Based on information collected during this trip, the author estimates the total number of people involved in informal recycling in India to be 2.86 million, i.e. 0.75% of the urban population (377 million) or 0.23 % of the total population of India (1,210 million). Numerically waste pickers in India possibly outnumber those in any single country in

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the world (36). Coordinating such a large work force will be a heavy burden on ULBs due to the lack of necessary managerial resources. Public policies towards the informal waste sector are largely Box 5: INTEGRATING THE INFORMAL SECTOR INTO FORMAL WASTE MANAGEMENT SYSTEMS negative in most parts of the Source: (36) world. It is either because of embarrassment at the presence To transform the aesthetics of waste handling by of waste pickers or concern for the informal sector, it has to be their inhuman and unhygienic working and living conditions and a) assisted to provide professionalized and has led to police harassment as efficient waste collection services; in Colombia; to neglect as in b) encouraged to introduce value added parts of West Africa; to collusion, services; where waste pickers are c) convinced about the importance of service tolerated in return for either level benchmarks and monitoring; bribes or support to political d) made aware of the importance of parties as in Mexico City (40). In maintaining work ethic and discipline; and case of developed economies, e) trained according to their work, depending they have allowed their informal on whether they are waste pickers, recycling systems to disappear itinerant buyers, sorters or graders. and as a result are now struggling to re-establish systems to rebuild recycling percentages to former levels and meet the ever-increasing recycling targets (40). But, the Government of India has clearly held a different path with an informed perspective. Blind eye towards wastepicking until now has been largely due to the sector's unreliability and inadequacy in managing enormous quantities of urban wastes. Their absorption into formal systems is also hindered by their lack of accountability unlike formal systems which are accountable to the public.
5.1.1.6 CHANGE IN PERCEPTION

The role of informal sector in recycling resources was recognized in the latest Plastic Waste (Management and Handling) Rules, 2011 that were regulated by the Ministry of Environment and Forests (MOEF). These rules make municipal authorities responsible for coordination of all stake holders involved in waste management, including waste pickers. Such laws are necessary

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in inching towards sustainable waste management and need support in the form of relevant policy changes at the national level. Institutionalizing the informal sector can overcome the issue of unreliability. This was evident in the case of road sweeping in Hyderabad, where the contracts were awarded to organized groups of informal waste pickers and workers. Also, employing self-help groups of waste pickers in door-to-door collection has proven successful nationwide; individuals in these groups have much better working conditions compared to earlier (41). Thus, the focus should be on institutionalizing the informal sector. Considering the ongoing widespread privatization of the MSWM sector, it is very important to frame policies that make the employment of wastepickers in the corporate sector easier. Once employed, the minimum wage requirements, labor laws and operational health and safety regulations will ensure their welfare. However, solving intricacies which arise due to such regulations will be a formidable challenge to policy makers. Further analysis and studies on the sectors impact on a) diverting waste from landfills and thus b) reducing need for transportation, along with c) waste characteristics before and after wastepicking will help involving informal sector in MSWM plans further.
5.2 COMPOSTING

Composting is the biological decomposition of the biodegradable organic fraction of MSW under controlled conditions to a state sufficiently stable for nuisance-free storage and handling and for safe use in land applications (42). Composting is the most widely employed MSWM technique in India, with above 70 composting plants (Appendix 8); most of these composting facilities handle between 100 1000 TPD of MSW. It is estimated that up to 6% of MSW collected is composted (7) which makes it the only major waste handling technology employed in India. India has an estimated potential of producing about 4.3 million tons of compost each year from MSW, which could help reducing the wide gap between availability and requirement of organic manure for soils in India (26). Composting is successful because it is a low cost and low infrastructure set-up and also produces compost, which is a marketable byproduct. In addition to making a positive contribution to agriculture, the sale of organic wastes reduces the amount of waste to be collected and disposed of by municipal authorities (43). Composting of MSW is undertaken by either of the two methods, a) Windrow composting or b) Vermicomposting. Landfill mining and bioremediation are other ways of extracting compost among other resources from landfills. Even though these two processes are different, theyll be

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used interchangeably in this report to indicate the process of emptying a landfill while recovering resources from it.

Box 6, HISTORY OF COMPOSTING AND REASONS FOR INITIAL FAILURES

Sources: (43) and (71) The first MBT plants in India were built in early 1970s with government intervention to promote its practice. Ten semi-mechanized composting plants (MBTs) were set up in Ahmadabad, Bombay, Bangalore, Baroda, Delhi, Calcutta, Jodhpur, Jaipur, Kanpur and Vijayawada in 1975-76 (71).The process included removal of big pieces, pulverization, forced aeration with augers and sieving. Almost all the plants have stopped working as there were many problems, which include: Semi-mechanized machinery was imported and a minor mechanical fault usually led to breakdown due to non-availability of spare parts, Mixed nature of waste was a major difficulty. Pulverizers got frequently clogged with pieces of rags, plastic and rubber etc. and blades of which were broken down due to metal and glass pieces present in the waste. Amount of soil mixed into the waste also caused problem in the process, in addition to the lowering of the quality produced. Lack of continuous power supply was another problem. The process could not be continued in rainy season. The actual capacity turned out to be far less than the designed capacity. Lack of market for the finished product was another problem. As a result the enterprise could not become self sustained.

During research visits in India, the author observed that vermicomposting was employed by towns or small cities generating MSW < 100 TPD, whereas larger cities employed mechanical windrow composting. Mechanical composting facilities optimize MSW processing and minimize manual handling of wastes. These composting plants which use mechanical and biological operations to handle mixed wastes are called Mechanical Biological Treatment plants (MBT). MBT and composting will be used interchangeably because almost all windrow composting plants in India operate as MBTs.

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The capital investment for building a composting plant is $ 4,500 per ton (INR 200,000) of waste processed (44) and the compost is being sold at $ 45 50 per ton (INR 2,000 2,200) (45). Availability of government aid and rising entrepreneurial interest resulted in an upsurge in the number of composting facilities nationwide. Among 74 cities examined for their present waste handling techniques, only 22 cities had composting facilities in 2008, whereas by 2010, the number of cities employing composting grew to 40. At present, there are a total of 70 cities which employ MSW composting and 22 new projects are proposed. In addition to the reasons cited for the failures of composting facilities in Box 6, another important but overlooked factor is the contamination of end product (43) by heavy metals, glass and plastic.
5.2.1 WINDROW COMPOSTING OR MECHANICAL BIOLOGICAL TREATMENT (MBT)

Windrow composting is the most common method of composting in India; it involves the stabilization of organic solid waste through aerobic decomposition. Windrow composting facilities can efficiently handle large quantities of waste in comparison to vermicomposting. For example, plants in Bengaluru, Pimpri and Nashik handle 100 TPD, 500 TPD and 300 TPD of MSW respectively (45) as compared to a vermicomposting plant in Suryapet which handles 40 TPD. During the MBT process, recyclables are separated from the mixed wastes, baled and sold to a nearby recycling company at a cost of $78 (INR 3,500) per ton of plastics and $56 (INR 2,500) per ton of paper (46).
5.2.1.1 COMPOSTING PROCESS

At MBT facilities, mixed wastes are first dried, shredded and sieved into 70 mm and 35 mm fractions. Only the -35 mm fraction undergoes composting; rest is compost rejects and goes to the landfill. -35 mm material is arranged in rows, 2 m tall, 3 m wide and 11 m long (Figure 27). A bacterial-slurry prepared inside the facility is then sprayed on these windrows to accelerate decomposition of the organic material. The windrows are turned once every week continuously for 8 weeks. At the end of the 8th week, the waste is shredded and sieved in multiple stages into +16 mm and -16 mm fractions. -16 mm is the precursor to compost which should be cured for another 2 3 weeks before being sold. It was observed that the demand for compost was higher than the supply from these facilities. On the basis of all information collected during this trip, the author estimates that only 6-7% of the input mixed waste (12 15 % of organic waste input) can be recovered as compost (Figure 28). Rest of the MSW, 60% (on wet basis) is landfilled as compost rejects (See Section5.2.4). Page | 80

Figure 27, Windrow Composting of mixed solid wastes is the most successful waste management technology in India

Figure 28, Material Balance Flowchart of MBT Process, with Calorific Values of Different Fractions of Composting Rejects: Source: Ramky Enviro Engineers

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5.2.2 LANDFILL MINING AND BIOREMEDIATION OF LANDFILLS

Landfill mining and bioremediation are very similar to each other and are both related to microbial digestion of organic wastes. The only difference is landfill mining is carried out after natural decomposition of organic wastes in a landfill and bioremediation is carried out by humans to accelerate the decomposition process.
5.2.2.1 LANDFILL MINING

Landfill mining is a process of recovering valuable materials from landfilled MSW. The process involves excavation, processing and reuse of landfilled materials with the objectives of conservation of landfill space; reuse of materials; reduction of landfill footprint; and elimination of potential contamination source and rehabilitation of dumpsite (47). Processing of the materials involves primary separation of materials and sieving; reuse of the recovered materials includes both energy and material recovery. The prime objective of landfill mining is space clearance for incoming waste or reclaiming land. A study of fourteen successful landfill mining operations outside India (Appendix 7) indicates eight of them were carried out with the prime motive of land reclamation, six of them for material and energy recovery, four to avoid long term contamination of groundwater and two of them were carried out as demonstration projects. MSW in landfills decomposes in two stages, a) aerobic decomposition and b) anaerobic decomposition (48). The products of such decomposition were observed to be chunks of compost mingled with plastic, paper and rags during the authors research visit to the Autonagar landfill in Hyderabad. The mining operations in this landfill were being carried out in a small scale.
5.2.2.2 LANDFILL MINING PROJECTS

Landfill mining in India was observed in cities with closed or overflowing landfills. The author visited the closed landfill in Autonagar, Hyderabad, which was being mined for compost by excavating and sieving the landfilled material. The compost is sold to organic fertilizer companies to be used in agriculture as a supplement to chemical fertilizer according to the Integrated Plant Nutrient Management policy. This process involves loosening, spraying a bioculture and regularly turning the waste beds. It is then followed by sieving and packing. By 2007, landfill mining was carried out seven times in five different cities, namely Nashik (in 2003), Madurai, Mumbai (in 2004), Hyderabad (in 2004, 2007) and Pune (in 2006, 2007). These seven projects together cleared more than 60 hectares of landfill area, emptying more than 5 Page | 82

million cubic meters of waste. This corresponds to about 3 million tons of MSW considering a bulk density of 0.5 tons/m3.
5.2.2.3 BIOREMEDIATION

Bioremediation with respect to MSW landfills can be defined as a cleanup technology employing biological options, generally bacteria to stabilize landfilled organic wastes through aerobic decomposition. The utility in such stabilization is
a. avoidance of anaerobic digestion of organics and resultant methane emissions b. avoidance of leaching and resultant water pollution c. value addition to landfilled MSW by making it easier to mine them (for landfill

mining) Bioremediation of landfills can also be used to help landfill mining. In this process which is very similar to windrow composting, bacterial slurry is sprayed on mixed waste and the heaps are turned regularly to produce compost which can then be mined. MSW over a hectare of land in Gorai dumpsite was stabilized/bio-remediated and the compost formed was mined along with recovery of recyclables. 9 m tall waste beds over this area were cleared in 3 months with low investment and infrastructure which is affordable by most Class I and Class II cities in India.
Table 13, Bioremediation Projects Undertaken in India Until 2007; Source: Almitra Patel

Open Dumps Bio-Remediated by the Year 2007 Area Area Waste Year Location cleared cleared Height (ha) (m2) (m) 2003 Nasik 11.6 116000 5 2004 Madurai 12 120000 2 2004 Mumbai 1 10000 10 2004 Hyderabad 3 30000 20 2007 Hyderabad 19 190000 20 2006 Pune (Demo) 1 10000 10 TOTAL 47.6 476000

Waste Volume (m3) 580,000 240,000 100,000 600,000 3,800,000 100,000 5,420,000

Total Cost (INR Millions) 6.4 0.75 1 -

Cost/cu.m 11.03448 3.125 10 -

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5.2.2.4 PROSPECTS FOR LANDFILL MINING AND BIOREMEDIATION IN INDIA

Even though landfill mining and bioremediation are similar processes to windrow composting, they have a higher carbon foot print as they are generally carried out in landfills consisting MSW which would have already emitted some (or all) methane due to anaerobic digestion. These process have a potential to earn CDM credits of $ 11 17 (INR 500 800) per ton of compost recovered (49). They also have the potential to provide an alternate solution to permanent landfills. Further, they avoid long term methane emissions from landfills and recover materials. The time period and costs to clear the landfills by these methods are impressive. However, the possibility of high heavy metal concentration in the compost looms large. The compost from such an activity will not be suitable for food crops. It can however be used in gardening or for cash crops. The major motive of landfill mining and bioremediation should be clearing the landfills rather than trying to sell the by-product compost. Before any decision can be taken on the usage of such compost, detailed studies are required.
5.2.3 COMPOST QUALITY AND HEAVY METAL CONTAMINATION

A less observed side effect of improper SWM in India is the introduction of heavy metals into human food chain. Compost from mixed waste composting plants is highly contaminated with heavy metals. Using this compost on agricultural fields will result in contamination of the agricultural soil with heavy metals. Food crops grown on contaminated agricultural soils when consumed will introduce the heavy metals into the food chain and lead to a phenomenon called biomaginification (50) (51). Biomaginification is defined by United States Geological Survey (USGS) as the process whereby the tissue concentrations of a contaminant (heavy metals) increases as it passes up the food chain through two or more trophic levels (plants and humans or plants, cattle and humans). Heavy metals generally found in mixed waste composts are Zinc (Zn), Copper (Cu), Cadmium (Cd), Lead (Pb), Nickel (Ni) and Chromium (Cr). A study conducted by the Indian Institute of Soil Science (IISS), Bhopal found that compost produced from MSW in India is low grade, with high heavy metal concentrations and low nutrient value (26). Figure 29 shows the range of concentration of heavy metals Zinc (Zn), Copper (Cu), Cadmium (Cd), Lead (Pb), Nickel (Ni) and Chromium (Cr) in MSW composts from 29 cities. Compost from only two cities out of twenty nine passed the statutory guidelines by European countries (except Netherlands) for high quality composts. The two cities are Suryapet and Vijayawada where MSW collection is source separated.

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Figure 29, Heavy Metals Concentration in Mixed Solid Waste Compost in Comparison to Quality Control Standards

Majority of the samples do not comply with Indian quality control standards (Figure 30, Appendix 12) for total potassium, total organic carbon, total phosphorus and moisture content; and exceeded the quality control limits for heavy metals contamination by Lead (Pb) and Chromium (Cr). The study also found that incidence of heavy metals in MSW compost from cities (population < 1 million) is less than half of that from bigger cities; but the compost still doesnt clear the quality control standards in all instances. If all MSW generated in India in the next decade is composted as mixed waste and used for agriculture, it would introduce 73,000 tons of heavy metals into agricultural soils (Appendix 13). Contamination of MSW compost by heavy metals can cause harm to public health and environment and is the major concern leading to its restricted agricultural use (22). Mixed waste composting is therefore not an option for sustainable waste management. In countries like India where more than 91% of MSW is landfilled and there are no other alternatives available, mixed waste composting is widely practiced and considered better (if not the best) than landfilling (8). For health impacts of heavy metals, see Section 5.2.3.

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Figure 30, Heavy Metal Concentration beyond Quality Control Standards in Mixed Solid Waste Compost from 29 Indian Cities, (26)

Authorities should make sure they are not ignoring future health costs by choosing economic (cheaper) technologies today and creating a bigger public health crisis in the form of bioaccumulation of heavy metals. Usage of MSW compost for food crops should be regulated; simultaneous research on the risk of bioaccumulation due to usage of MSW compost should be conducted to account for public health, and environmental costs in decision making.
5.2.4 COMPOST YIELD

Lack of actual performance data of MSW composting facilities was a major concern during initial research, thus an important finding during research visits is that the compost yield from mixed waste composting facilities (MBTs) is only 6-7%. Rest of the MSW, up to 60% of the input waste (accounting for moisture loss and material loss during decomposition) is discarded as composting rejects and landfilled (Appendix 15). Page | 86

Figure 31, Rejects from the composting plant at Pimpri Chinchwad

Rejects from composting plants in Bengaluru, Nashik and Pimpri were observed to contain a high percentage of plastics, mainly plastic bags (Figure 31, Figure 32). Composting treats only 11% of dry solids in MSW, the rest of it, i.e., about 90% of waste (on a dry basis, or 60% on a wet basis) ends up in unsanitary landfills in case of no further treatment (45). However, mixed waste composting still avoids landfilling of MSW and increases the operating life of a landfill by 2.5 years in every 20 years. Compost rejects at Pimpri composting facility were divided into four distinct fractions, (+) 70mm rejects (overflow from 70 mm sieve), (+) 35mm rejects (overflow from 35 mm sieve), (+) 16mm rejects (overflow from 16 mm sieve) and (+) 4mm rejects (overflow from 4 mm sieve). The number of fractions the rejects are divided into depends upon the facilit ys design. Analysis of these rejects showed that overall lower calorific value of composting rejects was 9.5 MJ/kg Page | 87

(2,300 kcal/kg). The lower calorific value of these fractions was found to be as high as 11.6 MJ/kg (2,800 kcal/kg).
Table 14, Composition of Various Fractions of MSW during Mechanical Biological Treatment (MBT); Source: Ramky Enviro Engineers Ltd.

Moisture

Ash

Volatile Matter 45.91 77.99 75.17 41.57 29.87 59.23

Fixed Carbon

LHV (MJ/kg)

Input MSW 70mm rejects 35mm rejects 16mm rejects 4mm rejects compost, after 4 weeks

16.05 5.74 5.25 26.74 10.25 14.01

34.36 12.31 14.72 20.12 54.01 22

3.68 3.96 4.86 11.57 5.87 4.76

7.3 11.6 10.8 10.0 4.7 8.8

Figure 32, Composting Rejects are up to 60% of Input MSW and have a Calorific Value as high as 11.6 MJ/kg

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The calorific value of input MSW at the Pimpri facility is 7.3 MJ/kg (1,750 kcal/kg). It is identical to the average calorific value of urban MSW in India which is also 7.3 MJ/kg. If MSW from all cities is treated in MBT facilities, the calorific value of compost rejects will be different from those from the Pimpri facility. However, since MSW generated in many cities has higher calorific value than the input MSW at Pimpri, we will assume composting rejects from MBT facilities in India have an average lower calorific value of 9.5 MJ/kg.
5.3 SMALL SCALE ANAEROBIC DIGESTION (BIOGAS)

Figure 33, A Small Scale Biogas Unit Developed by Biotech, Kerala; Capacity: 2 kg/day of Organic Waste

Anaerobic digestion of kitchen waste to produce biogas and liquid slurry on a small scale has been very successful in India, especially in parts of South and West India, where the regions temperate weather conditions favor the process yearlong. Many households have such biogas units installed. Total number of units installed in cities is unknown due to numerous companies offering them and the units are installed in both urban and rural areas. In order to have a closer Page | 89

look at this technology, the author identified a private company called Biotech with its office in Thiruvananthapuram, Kerala as a case study for small scale biogas. This company alone installed twenty thousand (20,000) units of small scale biogas (Figure 33) in Thiruvananthapuram and Kochi, combined. Units installed by Biotech divert about 40 tons of waste from landfills, which is 7% of the organic waste generated in both cities together. It also implies avoidance of about 5% of collection and transportation costs and resulting GHG emissions.
5.3.1 CAPACITY AND COST

The units are smaller in size, flexible with feed and operation when compared to its counterparts. They cost $ 470 (INR 21,000) per unit and almost half of this cost is subsidized in different ways. Each unit can handle kitchen waste from a household with 3 5 members and can generate one cubic meter of biogas every day. Biogas mainly constitutes methane and carbon dioxide and the unit can be connected directly to a cooking stove. Per capita organic waste generation in Thiruvananthapuram and Kochi is 0.17 kg/day and 0.38 kg/day respectively. A single household in Thiruvananthapuram and Kochi produce 0.5 0.85 kg/day and 1.1 2 kg/day respectively (depending on the number of persons in the house). Thus, the capacity of these biogas units is enough for households in these two cities and each unit occupies only 1.25 m2 of space. The technology was successfully scaled-up by the company to handle 300 kg of organic wastes every day. Space required per kg of waste treated increases with the scale due to increase in the number of single-units used and piping involved. More than 200 institutional units were installed at different hotels and canteens, hospitals, schools, markets and slaughter houses. Biogas from such institutional units is converted to electricity using a generator and is used for street lighting. One cubic meter of gas can produce 1.5 KW of electricity.
5.3.2 COMPARISON

Small scale biogas is a decentralized technology and the most environmentally friendly technology to recover energy from organic wastes. It can be successfully deployed in South India where the temperatures favor the process yearlong. The company Biotech is researching ways to introduce this into other regions of India which are colder. However looking at the public investment and integrated waste management perspective, it takes many such single units to address organic waste from a single community and the technology would be able to address only 50% of the waste stream in Thiruvananthapuram or Kochi. Also, the public investment into the technology is comparatively much higher (Table 15) and the units produce organic slurry which needs to be properly utilized. Table 15 is a comparison between small scale Page | 90

biogas and WTE combustion as waste to energy solutions to the SWM crisis in Chennai. The values used in these calculations are generation of 6,464 TPD of MSW (in year 2005), organic waste percentage of 41% and calorific value of 10.9 MJ/kg.
Table 15, Comparison of small scale biogas and WTE Combustion as options for SWM in Chennai (cost in USD); Source: Biotech, (15)

*Costs calculated for the society as a whole Small Scale USD WTE Combustion USD Comparison Biogas (INR) (INR) Capital Cost* 27,827,520,000 622,818,263 10,773,333,333 241,122,053 Operational 0 0 10,841,484,756 242,647,376 +Transportation Cost* (20 yrs) Expenses to 27,827,520,000 622,818,263 21,614,818,089 483,769,429 1.3 society Potential to avoid 41% 85% 2.1 Landfilling (%) Electric Energy 0.75 0.76 Produced (MWh/day/ton) Total Energy 25,915,311 63,793,335 2.5 produced in 20 yrs (MWh) Potential to Avoid 41% 0 41 Pollution due to Transportation (%) Residue Disposal Use for Sanitary Additional agriculture Landfill Cost for WTE

The difference in total costs is because of the difference in scale of the technologies compared and the difference in total energy produced is because the feed for small scale biogas is only organic waste whereas feed for WTE includes rest of the MSW fraction too which are an extra 40 - 50% and have higher calorific value. Despite these differences, small scale anaerobic digestion would be the most sustainable way to treat source separated organic wastes considering the avoidance of emissions from transportation. Since anaerobic digestion works only for source separated organics as is the case with small scale biogas plants, it is not at all an option for mixed solid wastes. As source separation is not practiced in India, it is difficult to collect separated organic wastes on a large scale. That also explains why large scale biomethanation which could have been an option otherwise is not a part of this report. Page | 91

5.4

REFUSE DERIVED FUEL

Refused Derived Fuel is MSW which has been processed to fulfill guidelines, regulatory or industry specifications mainly to achieve a high calorific value. Other refuse derived fuels include residues from industrial/trade waste, sewage sludge, industrial hazardous waste, biomass waste, etc (52). Industry specifications the RDF has to meet generally include specifications for boiler feed or emissions control. In developing countries like India with MSW which has a low calorific value (7.3 MJ/kg compared to values greater than 10 MJ/kg in Europe, Japan and US) and high percentage of inerts, processing of waste is necessary to make it suitable as a fuel. This makes RDF an important alternative to WTE combustion. One of the less expensive and well-established technologies to produce RDF from MSW is mechanical biological treatment (MBT). An MBT plant separates out metals and inert materials, screens out organic fractions (for stabilization using composting processes), and separates out high-calorific fractions for RDF. RDF can also result from a dry stabilization process in which residual waste (after separating out metals and inert materials) is dried through a composting process leaving the residual mass with a higher calorific value (23). The RDF thus produced is either used directly as floc/fluff or is compressed to make pellets. RDF fluff (as it is called in India) can be directly combusted in dedicated WTE plants whereas making RDF pellets increases the marketability of the product as they can be used for co-combustion in various solid fuel industries like cement kilns, coal fired power plants, etc. RDF is an alternative to WTE and is a potential waste management technology. It needs lesser capital and can make use of existing infrastructure, compared to WTE. To make RDF (or fluff as it is called in India to differentiate it from RDF pellets), mixed solid wastes are processed through stages of shredding, sieving, drying and compaction. RDF plants which make fluff are located near Hyderabad, Vijayawada, Jaipur and Chandigarh. RDF produced at Hyderabad and Vijayawada is taken to dedicated WTE plants for electricity generation, ( Figure 34), whereas RDF from Jaipur and Chandigarh plants is transported to cement plants to be used in place of coal. Hyderabad and Vijayawada had the first RDF facilities in India which served as demonstration projects. The administration of Nashik composting plant is testing the feasibility of using composting rejects as RDF in a cement plant; similar attempts are being made at Pimpri composting facility too.

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Box 7, SOLID FUEL INDUSTRY IN INDIA

Sources: (74) , (73), (72), www.indexmundi.com The solid fuel industry is well established in India. The major users of solid fuels are power plants, steel plants, cement manufacturing plants, alumina refineries, etc. The solid fuel generally used is coal. The demand for solid fuel is very high. India consumed more than 600 billion tons of coal consumption in 2009 and is one of the major users of coal worldwide. Solid fuels are the second largest source of electricity after hydro power. Coal accounted for 53% of Indias energy consumption in 2007. Usage of coal will double by the end of 2030 and increase domestic production and imports. In addition to rising environmental awareness and changing regulations, coal shortages, soaring coal prices and resulting frequent plant shutdowns have also increased the necessity for alternative sources of solid fuels. The coal used by Alumina refineries is of F and G grades, having a useful heat value ranging from 16 MJ/kg (3800 k.cal/kg) to 18 MH/kg (4300 k.cal/kg) and ash content ranging from 35% to 50%. In comparison, the lower calorific value of rejects from composting plants is as high as 11.6 MJ/kg and has very low ash content. Therefore, Rejects from composting can be further processed to cater to the needs of the huge and well established solid fuel industry. RDF from Jaipur and Chandigarh facilities is already being used as fuel in cement plants.

5.4.1 RDF FOR SOLID FUEL INDUSTRY

High percentage of rejects from MBT facilities (60%), having a high calorific value (9.5 MJ/kg) opens a huge opportunity for RDF and WTE. Assuming 6% of all MSW generated in India is treated in MBT facilities, out of which, 60% is compost rejects which could be used as refuse derived fuel (RDF), India is currently generating 2.48 million TPY of RDF. Such a huge source of energy is being generated and landfilled every year. This is equivalent to landfilling nearly 4 million barrels of oil because there are no facilities which could use them. This RDF can be used in the already well established solid fuel industry in India (Box 7). India would have landfilled 58

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million barrels of oil in the form of RDF alone by 2041 if there were no RDF co-combustion or WTE facilities to generate energy out of it. Coal is the major source of energy for Indias solid fuel industry, which includes thermal power plants, steel plants, cement kilns, aluminum refineries, etc. Coal shortage due to increasing consumption by China and other developing nations is driving its prices high and is also stalling the operations of many industries. In early 2011, many thermal power plants were operated below capacity due to low reserves of coal, threatening Indias energy security. RDF can become an important alternative to coal in these industries. It is much cheaper considered to coal and readily available from existing MBT and RDF plants. Proper regulations and monitoring of co-combustion facilities are required to avoid environmental pollution due to RDF combustion. Pollution control equipment used in modern WTE facilities should be adopted by these co-combustion facilities.
5.4.2 EXISTING PROJECTS AND THEIR PERFORMANCE

The prospects of RDF in India were recognized very early after MSW Rules 2000 were passed. Two plants to produce and combust RDF were built near Hyderabad and Vijayawada in 2003 (3 years after MSW Rules 2000). These two plants built with assistance from government agencies like Andhra Pradesh Technology Development Corporation (APTDC) served as demonstration projects for the technology. Two other RDF making plants were built in Jaipur and Chandigarh which use RDF as fuel in cement plants to reduce the amount of coal used. Totally, there are 6 RDF plants in India, near Hyderabad, Vijayawada, Jaipur, Chandigarh, Mumbai and Rajkot. The RDF plant in Vijayawada serves two cities, Vijayawada and Guntur. The Hyderabad and Vijayawada RDF plants were the first RDF plants to be built in India and each handle 700 TPD and 500 TPD of MSW to generate 6 MW of electricity respectively. The author visited one of these plants and found out that theyre both not in operation, currently. The RDF plants near Jaipur and Chandigarh can be considered as the second generation of RDF plants which combust the RDF produced in cement kilns to replace fossil fuels. They handle 500 TPD of MSW each. The author visited the plant in Jaipur and found that it is not operated regularly. The plant in Chandigarh is known to have been dormant too, but it is being retrofitted with systems to reduce moisture in the MSW while processing. The RDF plant in Rajkot handles 300 TPD of waste. Other than this, there is not much information available about this plant; its present operations status is not known either. Its the same case with the small scale RDF plant in Mumbai, which produces RDF pellets by processing 80 TPD of MSW.

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5.4.3 ANALYSIS OF RDF PLANTS IN INDIA

The analysis of RDF plants presented in this section is based on the authors field visits and meetings with professionals who were involved in building and operating these plants.
5.4.3.1 EARLY FAILURES

Similar to earlier waste management technologies experimented in India, RDF plants also met with initial failures. Out of the six well known RDF facilities in India, two are now out of operation, another two are not operated regularly and the status of the remaining two is unknown. Reasons for these failures are discussed in the sections below. A common observation was that the investors in RDF facilities overestimated the supply of wastes and the fraction that can be recovered as RDF. Simultaneously, only capital costs were considered and long term maintenance costs were either ignored or were severely underestimated. These issues need to be addressed in future RDF projects and relevant changes are required in existing projects.
5.4.3.1.1 HYDERABAD AND VIJAYAWADA (RDF WTE)

The four plants in India can be divided into two categories for analysis, the first two at Hyderabad and Vijayawada are RDF combustion facilities and are similar in design, and the next two at Jaipur and Chandigarh send their waste to co-combustion facilities and are similar to each other in design. While plants in Hyderabad, Jaipur and Chandigarh serve only the city that is mentioned, the plant at Vijayawada is built to handle wastes from Vijayawada and Guntur (40 km apart) each with a current population of 1.4 million and 678,000 respectively. Vijayawada and Guntur generate about 700 TPD and 300 TPD of MSW respectively. The RDF combustion plant for Hyderabad is built 50 km away in a village called Elikatta in the district of Mahabubnagar and receives RDF from the processing facility inside the city, whereas the combustion facility at Vijayawada receives half of the RDF from the processing plant situated nearby and the other half from the plant in Guntur, 40 km away. Both these combustion plants are designed to handle 700 TPD of RDF and supplementary biomass to produce 6 MW of electricity. The author visited the plant at Hyderabad in which the waste is dumped at ground level and fed into a traveling grate, stoker fired boiler by inclined conveyors (Figure 34). Both facilities generated above 6.6 MW (more than design power) during their initial years of operation. Even though the plant at Hyderabad is not running, the boiler is still working and is operated twice every month to maintain the machinery. Page | 95

The reasons for the failure to operate the plant are mechanical problems in the condenser (Figure 35) and leaks in the piping, which if replaced will get the plant running. A condenser is a common component in process industries and is not unique to WTE plants. In addition to failure of condenser, it is believed that the plant had problems with continuous waste supply. Vijayawada plant is believed to have problems with the supply of waste to the facility and it could operate for only about 6 years (53).

Figure 34, Conveyor Belt for Feeding RDF into the WTE Boiler, Hyderabad RDF-WTE Plant, Elikatta

A common observation in all these failures is the lack of institutional framework and legal agreements between the a) municipalities, b) plant owners and the c) electricity boards. The technology did well but with additional fuel like rice husk as is the case in Hyderabad, where 20 - 25% by weight of the feed to boiler is rice husk, which has a calorific value of 13 MJ/kg (54). By adding 25% (weight %) of rice husk to RDF which has a calorific value of 11.7 MJ/kg (55), we get a mixed fuel with calorific value of 12 MJ/kg which is sufficient for self sustained combustion. If additional biomass fuel like rice husk or bagasse is considered during design of the plant, the price fluctuations of such fuel have to be considered too, which did not seem to happen in case Page | 96

of Hyderabad plant. Procuring these additional biomass fuels was not economical at times and there was no continuous supply of these fuels.

Figure 35, Condensers of Hyderabad RDF-WTE Plant, Elikatta

5.4.3.1.2 JAIPUR AND CHANDIGARH

The RDF facility at Jaipur is situated 17 km away from the city and can handle 500 TPD of MSW, however it has been running at only 70% capacity, handling 350 TPD. The facility was not in operation during the authors visit and the last time it was operated was on February 14, 2011 (as on 05th March, 2011). The facility operates with a RDF recovery percentage of 7 8 % depending upon the requirement of fluff at a cement plant located 350 km away. With an efficiency of recovering only 7 8% of wastes, RDF technology can increase a landfills lifetime by only 1.5 years in every 20 years. As the facility at Jaipur is not operating every day, the waste that is not accepted is dumped at the nearby landfill along with rejects (above 90% of the input) and construction and demolition debris. The facility employs two shredders, both imported, a trommel screen, a vibrating screen and a magnetic separator. One of the shredders used at the facility was observed to undergo severe wear and tear and was replaced at least four times Page | 97

since initial installation of the facility. Chandigarh facility was also known to have been facing problems and that its frequency of operation is low. It is currently undergoing technology upgradation and is expected to resume full scale operation soon.
5.4.4 HIGH PERCENTAGE OF REJECTS

During research visits in India, it was observed that the output from RDF plants was only 5-7%. Rest of the MSW, up to 95% is landfilled. In most occasions, the RDF plant rejects are not accepted at landfills or it becomes expensive for the operator to transport such huge quantity of rejects to a landfill. Therefore, these rejects can be seen dumped around the facilities. The operators at these facilities complained that the presence of construction and demolition (C & D) waste decreased the overall RDF output. Presence of C & D wastes not only increased the inerts percentage but it also makes separation of high calorific value fraction difficult. Primary shredders employed in these facilities also had difficulty dealing with high percentage of C & D wastes. Use of RDF for co-combustion in cement plants also faces significant problems in India. Cement plants needed RDF as a fuel only when coal and other biomass fuels became expensive or were not available. RDF has lesser calorific value compared to coal and therefore is not a priority choice in cement plants. Due to the lack of continuous demand for RDF at respective cement plants, the MSW which reaches the RDF plant everyday is not always processed and is dumped along with the inerts around the plant or in landfills.
5.5 WASTE-TO-ENERGY COMBUSTION

Waste-to-Energy combustion is a proven mixed waste handling technology across the developed world. Comparatively it is less successful in countries like the US when compared to Europe and Japan. This is due to different reasons, the most prevalent one being cheaper landfilling in the US due to larger land availability. But in the case of New York, New York pays just $60 per ton as a tipping fee for MSW that is thermally treated at a WTE plant in Newark, NJ, while paying over $100 per ton of several million tons of trash it generates that are hauled to remote landfills in South Carolina, Ohio, and elsewhere (56). The probability of WTE becoming economically cheaper than landfilling in India is low due to loosely implemented regulations. However, with an increasing middle class, increase in public health awareness and generation of mixed waste (due to lack of source separation), WTE will become an important part of integrated solid waste management in India. Due to the lack of source separation all MSW generated and collected is mixed waste.

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WTE is the only technological solution which could recover the maximum energy and materials from mixed waste. WTE boilers are specifically designed to be flexible with feed in order to be able to handle highly heterogeneous mixed solid wastes. WTE is recognized as a renewable energy technology by the Government of India (GOI). Australia, Denmark, Japan, Netherlands and the US are some more countries which recognize WTE as a renewable energy technology (15). Due to the dominance of organic waste in MSW, it is considered as a bio-fuel which can be replenished by agriculture. In India, urban MSW contains as much as 60% organic fraction and 10% paper. Therefore, potentially, 70% of energy from WTE plants is renewable energy. The activity in the WTE sector has increased considerably within only one year since authors first research visit in January, 2010. A WTE plant is under construction at Okhla, New Delhi; two RDF-WTE plants are under construction at Bibinagar (Hyderabad) and Karimnagar; and a WTE plant is being planned for Pimpri. Apart from these new projects, there are already two RDFWTE plants in India, one in Hyderabad and the other in Vijayawada (See Section 5.4.3.1.1). They employ similar technology and design parameters. They use refused derived fuel mixed with agro wastes as feed into traveling grate, stoker fired boilers to generate 6.6 MW power. Only two WTE plants and two RDF-WTE plants were built in India until now. The latest one among them has finished construction on the Okhla landfill site, New Delhi and is about to start operations. The first WTE incinerator in India was installed at Timarpur, Delhi in 1985. It was designed to produce 3.75 MW of electricity, based on imported technology at the cost of $ 9.1 million (INR 410 million) (53). It failed to operate on a daily basis and was on a trial run until 1990 when it was closed (57). The two RDF-WTE plants built at Hyderabad and Vijayawada are not working either (See Section 5.4.3.1). The track record of WTE in India is acting as its biggest obstacle for further development. Past failures can act as lessons to forth coming WTE projects but will not be valid arguments against new facilities. This is because the reasons identified for past failures are a) improper design to handle Indian wastes and b) inadequate solid waste collection systems. Improper design includes mismatch of the quality of incoming refuse with the plant design calorific value (57), high percentage of inerts and having to handle refuse manually (58). The failures are due to bad planning, lack of inter-institutional cooperation, and lose implementation of contracts and laws. The WTE boiler installed in Hyderabad ran successfully and produced more power than designed capacity (6.6 MW) until its condenser stopped working due to air and water leakages. Also, since the first WTE in India in 1985, India has undergone two decades of unprecedented economic growth which changed the lifestyles, which in turn changed the nature of waste and Page | 99

increased its quantity. The change in nature of MSW resulted in higher percentage of recyclables and increase in calorific value of wastes; improvement in collection of MSW decreased the fraction of inerts that end up in the MSW stream. During the same time, WTE industry has also undergone a revolution in pollution control worldwide (59).
5.5.1 POWER POTENTIAL FROM URBAN MSW
Table 16, Potential for Energy Generation from MSW and Fossil Fuel (Coal) Displacement

S.No. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28

City Greater Kolkata Greater Mumbai Delhi Chennai Greater Hyderabad Greater Bengaluru Pune Ahmadabad Kanpur Surat Kochi Jaipur Coimbatore Greater Visakhapatnam Ludhiana Agra Patna Bhopal Indore Allahabad Meerut Nagpur Lucknow Srinagar Asansol Varanasi Vijayawada Amritsar

MSW Generated (TPD) 11,520 11,124 11,040 6,118 4,923 3,344 2,602 2,518 1,756 1,734 1,366 1,362 1,253 1,194 1,115 1,021 945 877 867 815 804 801 743 713 706 706 688 679

Calorific Value (MJ/kg) 5.0 7.5 7.5 10.9 8.2 10.0 10.6 4.9 6.6 4.1 2.5 3.5 10.0 6.7 10.7 2.2 3.4 5.9 6.0 4.9 4.6 11.0 6.5 5.3 4.8 3.4 8.0 7.7

Power Production Potential (MW) 129.9 186.6 186.8 149.0 91.0 74.9 61.8 27.9 25.9 16.1 7.6 10.7 28.0 18.0 26.8 5.0 7.3 11.7 11.7 9.0 8.2 19.8 10.9 8.5 7.7 5.3 12.3 11.7

Coal substituted (TPY) 1,445,194 2,075,263 2,078,043 1,657,716 1,012,526 833,427 687,908 310,362 288,159 179,314 84,327 118,652 311,631 199,801 298,041 55,457 80,844 130,174 130,139 100,455 91,457 220,216 120,839 94,139 85,250 59,291 137,263 130,219

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S.No. City 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 Faridabad Dhanbad Vadodara Madurai Jammu Jamshedpur Chandigarh Pondicherry Jabalpur Bhubaneswar Nashik Ranchi Rajkot Raipur Thiruvananthapuram Dehradun Guwahati Shillong Agartala Port Blair Aizwal Panaji Imphal Gandhinagar Shimla Daman Kohima Gangtok Itanagar Silvassa Kavarati TOTAL

MSW Generated (TPD) 667 625 606 543 534 515 486 449 380 356 329 325 317 316 308 247 246 137 114 114 86 81 72 65 59 23 20 19 18 11 5 81,407

Calorific Value (MJ/kg) 5.5 2.5 7.5 7.6 7.5 4.2 5.9 7.7 8.6 3.1 11.6 4.4 2.9 5.3 10.0 10.2 6.4 11.5 10.2 6.2 15.8 9.3 15.8 2.9 10.8 10.8 11.9 5.2 14.3 5.4 9.4

Power production Potential (MW) 8.3 3.5 10.1 9.2 8.9 4.9 6.4 7.8 7.3 2.5 8.5 3.2 2.0 3.8 6.9 5.7 3.5 3.5 2.6 1.6 3.0 1.7 2.5 0.4 1.4 0.6 0.5 0.2 0.6 0.1 0.1 1,292

Coal substituted (TPY) 91,897 38,583 112,737 102,832 99,398 54,279 71,478 86,578 81,410 27,592 94,918 35,985 22,748 42,019 76,506 63,082 39,032 39,153 28,901 17,552 33,831 18,707 28,323 4,739 15,851 6,218 5,941 2,449 6,419 1,472 1,171 14,367,909

The overall power potential from MSW in India is estimated to be 3,650 MW and 5,200 MW by 2012 and 2017 respectively (60). Power potential from MSW from 59 cities was found out to be 1,292 MW. Generation of energy from MSW can displace 14.5 million TPY of low grade coal every year. Delhi has the highest potential for power generation from MSW (186.8 MW), Page | 101

followed by Mumbai (186.6 MW), Chennai (149 MW), and Hyderabad (91 MW). MSW generated in Chennai (6,118 TPD) is only about half of the waste generated in Kolkata (11,520 TPD) but it has a higher calorific value (10.9 MJ/kg), more than twice of that of MSW in Kolkata (5 MJ/kg). Chennai has the highest calorific value of MSW compared to other cities generating MSW > 1,000 TPD, followed by Ludhiana (10.7 MJ/kg), Pune (10.6 MJ/kg), and Bengaluru and Coimbatore (10 MJ/kg). WTE is a large scale technology. Most WTE plants are built with a capacity to handle 1,000 TPD of waste. The concept of regional landfills should be adopted to build regional WTE facilities to serve two or more cities, each of which landfill less than 1,000 TPD of MSW after recycling and composting.
5.5.2 COST

Modern WTE combustion facilities are designed according to Maximum Available Control Technology (MACT) regulations, requiring investment of majority of the capital in building a WTE plant in its pollution control technology (Table 18). The economics of a WTE plant depends upon the type of energy output from it. Energy generation from MSW can be in the form of electricity and/or steam. WTE plants which generate only steam as the final product are less capital expensive. Some WTE plants generate electricity and low pressure steam, which increases their overall energy efficiency and revenues. However, the generation of steam requires the presence of industries which can utilize a continuous supply of process steam or facilities which need district heating (and cooling). WTE plants in Europe and US provide steam for district heating and cooling. Perinaz Bhada, et al., recommends a WTE facility selling only electricity for India due to the current absence of district heating (and cooling) infrastructure in Mumbai and elsewhere. However, Investors in Indian WTE market should consider the possibility of industrial steam utilization to achieve better efficiency and economy. Electricity generation from WTE would require a steam turbine in addition to the combustion facility and therefore is more expensive compared to a facility which generates only steam. The capital cost of building such a WTE plant is USD 51,000 (INR 2,300,000) per ton of waste processed (62) (63). In comparison to windrow composting which costs only $ 4,500 (INR 200,000) per ton of organic waste processed (1), WTE is expensive. However, electricity produced from WTE plants has better product demand and no marketing issues like compost. It can be sold to the grid directly. Also, WTE will provide better pollution control compared to mixed-waste composting, which disperses the pollutants in to agricultural fields and later into environment.

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Cost per kilowatt hour of electricity generated by MSW, is slightly costlier than other biomass fuels, wind and small hydro (15). It is very cheap compared to solar photovoltaic, which is currently highly subsidized by GOI. While comparing WTE to other waste management techniques, its potential to generate energy and handle mixed wastes with least/no harm to environment and public health should be considered. While comparing it to other renewable energy options, benefits of waste management, energy and metal recovery, and reduction of green house gases should be considered (15). Compared to other sources of energy, energy generation from MSW is imperative, which would otherwise cause serious public health and environmental damage (61).
5.5.3 OKHLA WASTE-TO-ENERGY PROJECT, NEW DELHI

The WTE plant built at Okhla, New Delhi is scheduled to start operations in 2011. Okhla plant will be the first modern WTE combustion plant in India, it is designed to handle 1350 TPD of MSW and generate 16 MW of power. This WTE facility will provide energy to 600,000 households and will treat MSW generated by nearly 800,000 households. Its success in operation and in monitoring emissions will have a strong influence on the future of WTE industry in India. It is built on an old dumpsite. It is facing public protests because of the increase in truck traffic in adjoining communities, once the operations begin. Okhla area has a landfill operating since 1994 and receiving 1200 TPD MSW. Some of this MSW used to be dumped at the present WTE facilitys site. It is unknown how much waste was dumped here to compare the increase in truck traffic. In case of increase in truck traffic, one way of reducing it would be to employ trucks with larger capacities.
5.5.4 EMISSIONS

Incinerators had a long history of pollution. They were one of the major sources of pollution in western countries where municipal, medical and hazardous wastes were burnt in incinerators. They were recognized as sources of pollution and due to rise in environmental awareness and decrease in air quality in cities, most of them were shut down. Stringent air quality regulations made by respective governments led to less polluting technology. Since then, the pollution control equipment has advanced so rapidly that the US EPA regards it as a clean, reliable, renewable source of energy, and one that has less environmental impact than almost any other source of electricity (15). WTE also provides point source pollution control, where pollutants from the MSW which would otherwise get dispersed in nature can be captured and handled accordingly.

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Table 17, Low Emissions Achieved by German WTE Facilities; Source: EEC

Emissions Particulate Matter Sulfur Dioxide (SO2) Nitrous Oxides (NOx) Total Organic Carbon Carbon Monoxide (CO) Mercury (Hg) Heavy Metals Dioxins (ng/Nm3)

Emissions Standards (mg/m3) Emissions Achieved (mg/m3) 10 50 200 10 50 0.03 0.51 0.11 0.3 1.35 28.8 0.2 6.05 0.001 0.0162 0.00058

The advent of pollution control technology has dramatically reduced dioxins and furans emissions from WTE plants. A comprehensive study of all available literature by National Research Council (NRC), USA published as Waste Incineration and Public Health found no correlation between WTE plants and public health impacts. A study conducted by Chinese Academy of Sciences and Stanford University found that emissions from all Chinese WTE facilities were in compliance with Chinese standards.
100% 90% 80% 70% 60% 50% 40% 30% 20% 10% 0%

Emissions Standards (mg/m3)

Emissions Achieved (mg/m3)

Figure 36, Comparison of German Emissions Standards and Emissions achieved by German WTE facilities

All 84 WTE plants in US together release less than 12 g/year of dioxins combined. The average dioxins emissions from all small and large WTE plants in France are 0.003 ng/Nm3 and 0.017 Page | 104

ng/Nm3 respectively. These emissions are 33 times and 5 times lower than the EU and French standard for dioxin emissions (0.1 ng/Nm3), which is one of the most stringent regulation for dioxins in the world. Other emissions from WTE facilities are also very low. Lowest emissions from German WTE facilities are provided in Table 17. Figure 36 shows that these facilities emit much lower than the most stringent standards for pollutant emissions in the world. Large WTE facilities in China which adopted best available air pollution control technology could even meet European standards. The study found small concentration of dioxins in agricultural soils in the vicinity of a WTE plant, the major sources for which were found out to be open burning of wastes, traffic and nearby hot water boilers (62).
5.5.5 EMISSIONS CONTROL TECHNOLOGY
Table 18, WTE Air Emissions, Emission Sources and Causes, and Control Technology Emission Carbon Monoxide (CO) Particulate Matter (PM) Nitrogen Oxides (NOx) Sulfur Dioxide (SO2) Hydrogen Chloride (HCl) Dioxins and Furans Mercury (Hg) Lead (Pb) Trace organic compounds Fugitive Emissions Source Carbon in fuel Carbon and minerals in fuel Nitrogen in fuel and primary air Sulfur in fuel Chlorine in fuel Organic chlorine in fuel Hg in waste stream Pb in waste stream Carbon and hydrogen in fuel Initial waste handling Incomplete combustion Major Cause Incomplete combustion Incomplete and combustion Control Mechanism/technology Boiler and grate design to enhance combustion and turbulence, auxiliary burners Boiler and grate design to enhance combustion and turbulence, auxiliary burners, fabric filters Flue gas recirculation, selective non-catalytic reduction Packed bed absorption with alkaline scrubbing liquid Dry lime injection, packed bed absorption with acidic scrubbing liquid Auxiliary burners, high temperature oxidizing conditions, rapid gas cooling, adsorption by activated carbon injection Adsorption by activated carbon injection Fabric filters High temperature oxidizing conditions Negative pressure buildings and use as primary air for combustion

High temperature conditions Product of Oxidation Product of Halogenation, Incomplete combustion and temperatures o between 140 - 149 C

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Modern WTE facilities employ extensive pollution control technologies which comply with MACT regulations (Maximum Available Control Technology) of USEPA. Some pollution control mechanisms and technologies employed include, flue gas recirculation, selective non-catalytic reduction, activated carbon injection, packed bed absorbers, fabric filters, etc. (Table 18) Source separated collection is also an important method to control pollution. Source separation of MSW allows for more precise control of combustion conditions. For example, removal of chlorine containing metals and plastics from the MSW stream reduces reactions due to metal catalysts inside the plant and can significantly decrease dioxins formation in incineration (62). Source separation also helps increasing the recycling and composting rates and ensures the combustion of only the non-recyclable and non-compostable fraction of MSW.
5.5.6 OPPOSITION TO WTE

WTE is opposed in India due to the failure of Timarpur plant in 1985. The failure of the Timarpur plant was the eleventh among waste management facilities which failed to work in India, the first ten being composting (MBT) plants. The reasons of this failure are improper planning and import of foreign equipment which cannot be repaired in India, which are the same for the failure of composting plants. The opposition to only WTE arises because of the high cost of building one such plant. Most of the opposition to WTE in India is inherited from the opposition to polluting incinerators in the West around the 1980s. It is an ironic situation for WTE all around the world because it is targeted for opposition despite its effectiveness in managing wastes. This situation demands better knowledge about the concept of waste-to-energy and also a deeper analysis of existing data. It also pushes academicians into supporting WTE, which they do not have to do with other effective SWM techniques like recycling and composting. Often in extreme situations, WTE gets more opposition than landfilling! The main objective of WTE is to manage wastes, reduce the volume of waste landfilled and recover resources. Energy generation adds value to the waste and makes proper waste management economically feasible. Composting and biomethanation work on the same principle too.

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5.5.7 ON COMPETITION WITH RECYCLING

One of the arguments against WTE which needs clarification is its competition with recycling. Opponents of WTE claim that installing WTE facilities decreases recycling in the community. However, the ladder of sustainable waste management (Figure 37) prepared by the Earth Engineering Center at Columbia University shows that recycling and WTE go hand in hand in reducing the amount of wastes landfilled. Countries which recycle most of their wastes also employ more WTE combustion and vice versa. Employing combustion for waste management indicates a high level of environmental awareness of a country. Netherlands for example is employing the most sustainable waste management strategy. The strategy they employ includes a combination of recycling, composting and WTE to the extent that the MSW landfilled in Netherlands is nearly zero. As can be observed in other sustainable countries, WTE is an important aspect of an integrated waste management system in addition to recycling and composting. The argument of 'competition with recycling is extrapolated further in developing nations by some organizations and it is claimed that installing WTE facilities not only reduces recycling but also displaces waste pickers. This might happen if the municipal authority shuts WPs from the formally collected waste. But, a closer look at the numbers shows a different situation. For example (Appendix 6), 7,000 WPs in Pune collect and help recycle up to 56% of recyclables generated every year. However, the amount of recyclables recycled from formally collected wastes is only 21%, which is only 4% of the total wastes collected formally. It has to be understood that informal recycling already works very efficiently and this percentage of recycling is achieved by WPs collecting 34 kg/day each (Chintan estimates 60 kg/person/day is collected by WPs). Despite the huge number of WPs working efficiently every day, the amount of wastes recycled are only 4%. The rest, about 330,000 TPY of MSW is still landfilled. WTE facilities if planned will be designed to handle only fraction of these wastes which have already been foraged for recyclables. The efficiency of WPs can be further increased by providing waste transfer stations or material recovery facilities (MRFs) to them. But, the rise in efficiency of recycling achievable in near future does not assure complete waste management. It indeed leaves thousands of tons of MSW to be landfilled every year. Therefore, even if a WTE facility with 210,000 TPY MSW handling capacity (similar to Hyderabad and Vijayawada) is built, it would not interfere with the recyclable collection by WPs. However, it has to be made sure that MSW input to WTE facilities comes from the rejects of MRF facilities where all recoverable recyclables are separated. This can be made possible by integrating the informal sector into the overall waste management system of the city. Page | 107

Figure 37, Sustainability ladder of SWM in Europe, Source: EEC

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5.6

SOURCE SEPARATION

Proper SWM requires separate collection of different wastes, called source-separated waste collection. Source separated collection is common in high income regions of the world like Europe, North America and Japan where the infrastructure to transport separate waste streams exists. Most centralized municipal systems in low income countries like India collect solid wastes in a mixed form because source separate collection systems are non-existent. Source separated collection of waste is limited by infrastructure, personnel and public awareness. In India only paper is separately collected from the source by itinerant waste buyers present all over cities. Small scale biodigestion also uses source separated kitchen waste.
Table 19, Effect of Source Separation on Heavy Metals in MSW Compost; Source: IISS

Heavy Metals Zinc Copper Cadmium* Lead Nickel Chromium

Concentration in compost (mg/kg)


Mixed Waste Partially Separated Source Separated

414 370 230 252 41 142

303 292 90 183 44 88

153 81 80 41 21 53

Cadmium* Concentration Units: mg/100 kg

450 400 350 300 250 200 150 100 50 0 Zinc Copper
Mixed Waste

Cadmium*

Lead

Nickel
Source Separated

Chromium

Partially Separated

Figure 38, Impact of Source Separation on Heavy Metals Concentration in MSW Compost

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Efficiency of recycling and composting is greatly reduced due to the general absence of source separation. Absence of source separation strikes centralized aerobic or anaerobic digestion processes off the list. Anaerobic digestion is very sensitive to the feed quality and thus biomethanation systems get easily upset due to impurities in the feed. This was the reason for the failure of a large scale biomethanation plant in Lucknow. Aerobic Composting requires source separated organic materials too, to avoid impurities and heavy metals in the final compost (Table 19, Figure 38). The only known composting plants which handle source separated organic wastes are in Vijayawada and Suryapet (26). Increasing source separation would increase the overall material and energy recovery rates from MSW. It also helps control pollution in WTE plants. For example, removal of chlorine containing metals and plastics from the MSW stream reduces reactions due to metal catalysts inside the plant and can significantly decrease dioxins formation in incineration (62). Source separation also ensures the combustion of only the non-recyclable and non-compostable fraction of MSW.

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GOVERNMENT POLICY & EFFORTS

Box 8 GOVERNMENT POLICY

Source: (9) The Government of India (GOI) recognizes that the existing state of MSW management systems in the country is also raising serious public health concerns and sanitation issues that need to be addressed in the public interest. The responsibility for SWM management lies with the respective Urban Local Bodies (ULBs), consisting of municipal corporations, municipalities, nagar panchayats, etc., (collectively referred to as the Authorities). The Municipal Solid Waste (Managemen t and Handling) Rules, 2000 (the MSW Rules), issued by the Ministry of Environment and Forests, Government of India, under the Environment (Protection) Act, 1986, prescribe the manner in which the Authorities have to undertake collection, segregation, storage, transportation, processing and disposal of the municipal solid waste (the MSW) generated within their jurisdiction under their respective governing legislation. Compliance with the MSW Rules requires that appropriate systems and infrastructure facilities be put in place to undertake scientific collection, management, processing and disposal of MSW. However, it has increasingly come to the attention of the national (and state) government that, the Authorities are unable to implement and sustain projects to enable scientific collection, management, processing and disposal of MSW. This is mainly due to lack of financial and technical expertise and scarcity of resources, such as land and manpower, with the Authorities, which makes it difficult for them to discharge their obligations in relation to scientific collection, management, and Government ofand India through its various wings has implemented or sponsored numerous processing disposal of MSW. workshops for municipal officials and conferences for businesses and academia on SWM. Apart from such encouragement, it introduced schemes like Jawaharlal Nehru National Urban Renewal Mission (JnNURM) to develop urban areas and included proper SWM as one of its main objectives. Under JnNURM, GOI sponsored 42 SWM projects worth USD 500 million (INR 22.5 billion) between 2006 and 2009 (GOIs average share is around 20%) (Table 20). It has successfully joined hands with the private sector to form Public Private Partnerships (PPP).

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Table 20, JnNURM Projects Undertaken, and Government Share, Source: CPCB

S.No.
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35

City Agra Ahmadabad Allahabad Amritsar Asansol Chennai Chennai Coimbatore Dehradun Dhanbad Faridabad Guwahati Haridwar Imphal Indore Itanagar Jaipur Kanpur Kochi Kolkata Kolkata Lucknow Madurai Mathura Meerut Mumbai Mumbai Mysore Nainital Nasik Patna Patna Pondicherry Pune Rajkot

Year Total Cost Sanctioned (INR Lakhs) 2007 2009 2008 2009 2007 2007 2008 2007 2008 2009 2007 2007 2009 2007 2007 2007 2006 2007 2007 2007 2009 2007 2007 2006 2006 2009 2007 2008 2010 2006 2008 2007 2009 2006 2006 3,083.99 11,885.84 3,041.49 7,249.00 4,357.27 25,532.00 4,421.25 9,651.00 2,460.00 5,585.90 7,650.00 3,561.71 1,671.53 2,580.71 4,324.66 1,194.38 1,319.74 5,623.79 8,812.00 5,658.53 11,196.52 4,292.37 7,429.00 991.60 2,259.40 4,986.86 17,879.00 2,998.00 931.00 5,999.23 1,155.81 3,695.40 4,966.00 7,044.81 867.00

Total Cost (USD Million) 6.85 26.41 6.76 16.11 9.68 56.74 9.83 21.45 5.47 12.41 17.00 7.91 3.71 5.73 9.61 2.65 2.93 12.50 19.58 12.57 24.88 9.54 16.51 2.20 5.02 11.08 39.73 6.66 2.07 13.33 2.57 8.21 11.04 15.66 1.93

Government Contribution (USD Million) 1.71 2.31 0.84 2.01 2.42 4.96 0.86 8.04 1.09 1.55 2.13 3.52 0.74 1.29 3.60 1.19 1.10 3.12 4.89 3.30 2.18 1.19 6.19 0.88 1.26 0.97 3.48 1.33 0.41 5.00 0.32 1.03 2.21 3.91 0.96

Govt. Share (%) 25.0 8.7 12.5 12.5 25.0 8.8 8.7 37.5 20.0 12.5 12.5 44.4 20.0 22.5 37.5 45.0 37.5 25.0 25.0 26.2 8.8 12.5 37.5 40.0 25.0 8.7 8.7 20.0 20.0 37.5 12.5 12.5 20.0 25.0 50.0

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S.No.
36 37 38 39 40 41 42

City Ranchi Shimla Surat


Thiruvananthapuram

Year Total Cost Sanctioned (INR Lakhs) 2009 2007 2007 2008 2007 2007 2008 5,139.43 1,604.00 5,249.72 2,456.00 3,098.54 4,867.73 5,805.00
224,577.21

Vadodara Varanasi Vijayawada TOTAL/AVERAGE

Total Cost (USD Million) 11.42 3.56 11.67 5.46 6.89 10.82 12.90
499.06

Government Contribution (USD Million) 2.28 0.71 2.92 1.09 3.44 1.35 1.61
95.44

Govt. Share (%) 20.0 20.0 25.0 20.0 50.0 12.5 12.5
19.1

Box 9, JAWAHARLAL NEHRU NATIONAL URBAN RENEWAL MISSION (JnNURM)

Sources: (52), (7) JnNURM should be credited for the shift in the way Indian cities have started to manage their wastes. Even though Clean Development Mechanism (CDM) revenues were applicable to almost all SWM projects in India, the paradigm shift observed now has started only after the introduction of JnNURM. This Urban Renewal Mission was launched by the Government of India in December 2005 in response to challenges faced by urban Indians. An overall investment of over USD 22 billion (INR 100,000 crores) is envisaged over a period of 7 years from 2005-2012 in 65 priority cities. Central Government would contribute USD 13 billion and the rest will be contributed by State Governments and respective Urban Local Bodies (ULBs). By 2023, it is expected to benefit 150 million urban Indians. An important objective of JnNURM is to Improve SWM as a basic service. SWM projects initiated under JnNURM cover improving primary collection, waste transportation and waste disposal. Introduction of JnNURM has provided opportunities for expanding PPPs in all the above areas of SWM. Among the 42 SWM projects undertaken through JnNURM funds (Table 20), 34 cities proposed to start door to door collection. Rest of the cities are undertaking projects for sanitary landfill facilities and composting facilities.

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OTHER SOURCES OF INFORMATION

The scope of this study is limited to comparing different waste management technologies and their public health and environmental impacts and has consciously kept away from repeating information which is already published. The volume of research on SWM in less considering the need for such, however, good quality manuals, papers and guidelines do exist. This section cites those sources of information which could help get a wholesome idea of the entire solid waste management sector in India. Many other publications are available on www.WTERT.org and will also be made available on the website of WTERT India, which is under construction. To get an overall idea of the theoretical aspects, specifications, law and government policy, please refer to Solid Waste Management Manual, published by the Ministry of Urban Development (MOUD), Government of India (GOI). This publication covers topics ranging from MSW collection, technology specifications, waste handling techniques and the law and government policy among many other topics (BOX 10).
BOX 10, SELECTED CONTENTS IN MINISTRY OF URBAN DEVELOPMENTS SOLID WASTE MANAGEMENT MANUAL

Sources: MOUD, GOI

1. Principles of Solid Waste Management 2. Sorting and Material Recovery 3. Primary Collection of Waste 4. Waste Storage Depots 5. Transportation of Waste The Guidance Note published by MOUD, GOI 6. Composting on Municipal Solid Waste Management on a 7. Energy Recovery from MSW Regional Basis is an excellent source of 8. Emerging Technologies information on specifications and feasibility of 9. Landfills regional landfills and a good collection of such 10. Institutional Aspects case studies. 11. Economic and Financial Considerations The National Master Plan for Development of 12. Management Information Waste-to-Energy in India published by the System Ministry of New and Renewable Energy 13. Legal Aspects (MNRE), GOI is a very good source of 14. Policy Guidelines information on the theoretical aspects, 15. Preparation of a SWM plan opportunities and specifications of waste to energy technologies that could be adopted in India. The need for a feasibility study of a WTE plant, the rationale behind WTE and the need for WTE are covered in EECs publication Feasibility Analysis of Waste-to-Energy as a Key Component of Integrated Solid Waste Management in Mumbai, India. Page | 114

Recycling Livelihoods: Integration of the Informal Recycling Sector in Solid Waste Management in India published by SNDT Women's University, Chintan and GIZ presents a clear picture of the role of informal recycling sector in solid waste management in India and the issues and methods of integrating informal recycling sector into the overall waste management system of a city. Toolkit for Public Private Partnership frameworks in Municipal Solid Waste Management published by MOUD, Ministry of Finance Department of Economic Affairs, GOI and Asian Development Bank (ADB) presents the frame work, process and opportunities for public private partnerships (PPP) in the solid waste management sector in India.

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CONCLUSIONS

Two decades of economic growth since 1990 has changed the composition of Indian wastes. The quantity of MSW generated in India is increasing rapidly due to increasing population and change in lifestyles. Land is scarce and public health and environmental resources are precious. The current SWM crisis in India should be approached holistically; while planning for long term solutions, focus on the solving the present problems should be maintained. The Government of India and local authorities should work with their partners to promote source separation, achieve higher percentages of recycling and produce high quality compost from organics. While this is being achieved and recycling is increased, provisions should be made to handle the non-recyclable wastes that are being generated and will continue to be generated in the future (20). State Governments should take a proactive role in leveraging their power to optimize resources. Improving SWM in India is imperative. Improper SWM presents imminent danger to public health, Indias environment and the quality of life of Indians. Materials and energy recovery from wastes is an important aspect of improving SWM in India. It not only adds value to SWM projects and makes them economically feasible but is also more sustainable. Diverting MSW from landfills and especially from unsanitary landfills in India to any extent will contribute to the cause. India should choose those options or a combination of them, which will
a. best address the issue of overall solid waste management, b. have the least/no impact on public health and environment, c. consume minimal resources and d. be economically feasible.

Recycling, composting and waste-to-energy are integral parts of the solution and they are all required; none of them can solve the Indias SWM crisis alone. Policy to include waste-pickers in the private sector must be introduced to utilize their low cost public and environmental service and to provide better working conditions to these marginalized populations. MBT for windrow composting of mixed wastes should be used to separate wastes. Such separation at a later stage allows for managing the wastes better. Compost from such a facility should be used for cash crops/ or lawns or as landfill cover instead of for food crops. Rejects from composting should be combusted to produce energy and reduce their volume. Only the ash from the WTE plants or co-combustion facilities should be landfilled. Such a scenario would divert 93.7% of MSW from landfilling.

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If Indian WTE industry can exhibit self-responsibility in emissions control with constant emissions monitoring, and reporting and can feedback the results into a loop of selfimprovement, it will lead the way for reforms in implementation of regulations across all other industries. It would have also established itself as a solution to a crisis and a source of comfort to more than a billion people and inspiration to a huge industrial sector, rather than being perceived by some as another problem to fight against. The success of recycling in India depends upon leveraging the advantage India has in the form of informal recycling sector. There is a world-wide consensus that the need of recycled materials will spike in the next decade. The informal sector should be ready to meet this demand. This also increases opportunities for private companies which can aggregate large amounts of waste to supply in bulk. Prevalence of one of these or co-existence depends upon the quality of the product and the quantity (bulk) they can supply. Informal Sector should be integrated into formal system; Compost from MBT should be used as landfill cover/ cash crops/ lawns; RDF and WTE for the rest of the waste from MBT plants; and Majority source separation should be the target of Municipal corporations

Solid Waste Management, its impacts on public health and environment, and prospects for the future should be further researched. The findings should be disseminated into the public knowledge domain more effectively.

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PART II, WASTE-TO-ENERGY RESEARCH AND TECHNOLOGY COUNCIL IN INDIA (WTERT - INDIA)
9

WTERT INDIA

In order to address the rising interest, increasing investments and to funnel important decisions related to MSWM in India in the right direction, the Earth Engineering Center at Columbia University and National Environmental Engineering Research Institute have decided to set-up Waste-to-Energy Research and Technology Council (WTERT) in India; and included it in WTERTs global charter where it would function as Indias window to the world on the entire spectrum of SWM issues. WTERT India is set-up with the same guiding principle as WTERTs global charter that responsible management of wastes must be based on science and best available technology and not on ideology and economics that exclude environmental costs and seem to be inexpensive now but can be very costly in the future. All sister organizations in WTERTs global charter understand that solutions vary from region to region and work together towards better waste management around the world. WTERT India is set-up with the understanding that solutions to SWM in India will be different compared to other countries and is committed to researching locally available resources. WTERT India will represent the changing times in the country where attempts are being made to conserve every natural resource and reclaim them if possible. It also expects wastefulness of resources will decline and optimum recovery of materials and energy from wastes will be achieved. Some activities planned for WTERT-India are Brainstorming Workshop on SWM in general and WTE in particular to be held in India involving major stakeholders (PCBs, NGOs, Municipal Corporation and Private Companies) in early 2012, to identify niche research areas in SWM; International conference on SWM in Mumbai, India in 2012; Manuals on applicability of various MSW processing technologies to India; Providing internships for graduate students on research projects;

Setting up WTERT-India was an integral part of this research. It included bringing together the Earth Engineering Center (EEC) at Columbia University, the parent organization of Waste-toEnergy Research and Technology Council (WTERT) and the leading research organization on material and energy recovery from wastes in the world; and National Environmental Engineering Research Institute (NEERI), a prime research organization set up by the Government of India. WTERT India is EECs response to the lack of research and research Page | 118

organizations in India, specific to materials and energy recovery from wastes. EEC and NEERI have signed a Memorandum of Understanding to start collaboration (Annexure I) and have published a press release to this extent (Annexure III).
9.3 EARTH ENGINEERING CENTER (EEC)

For nearly two decades, the Earth Engineering Center (EEC) of Columbia University has conducted research on the generation and disposition of used materials and products in the U.S. and globally. This research has engaged many researchers on all aspects of waste management. Since 2000, EEC has produced thirty M.S. and Ph.D. theses and published nearly one hundred technical papers. In 2002, EEC co-founded, with the U.S. Energy Recovery Council (ERC; www.wte.org), the Waste-to-Energy Research and Technology Council (WTERT), which is by now the foremost research organization on the recovery of energy and metals from solid wastes in the U.S. For more information on EECs work and publications on waste m anagement, please visit www.WTERT.org.
9.4 NATIONAL ENVIRONMENTAL ENGINEERING RESEARCH INSTITUTE (NEERI)

The National Environmental Engineering Research Institute (NEERI) headquartered at Nagpur and with five other branches in Chennai, Delhi, Hyderabad, Kolkata and Mumbai is a prime research institute in India. It is a forerunner in research on SWM with a dedicated R & D division, and researchers. Research conducted by NEERI in 2005 on SWM in fifty nine cities is one of the most comprehensive studies on this issue. Other important studies on SWM include Indias Initial National Communication to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change and the work related to Landfill Gas Use as LNG in transport sector as well as new LFG models development that is in progress with Texas Transportation Institute, US. The researchers engaged in solid waste management at NEERI are recognized internationally. For more information on NEERIs work in India, please visit www.NEERI.res.in.
9.5 GLOBAL WTERT COUNCIL

WTERT India will be the latest addition to the Global WTERT Council which is already operating in the U.S., Canada, Greece, China, Germany, Japan, Brazil, France, U.K. and Italy. The mission of this council is to identify the best available technologies for the treatment of various waste materials, conduct additional academic research as required, and disseminate this information by means of publications, the WTERT web pages, and periodic meetings. In particular, WTERT strives to increase the global recovery of materials and energy from used

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solids, by means of recycling, composting, waste-to-energy, and, sanitary landfilling with LFG utilization.
10

BLOG, SOLID WASTE MANAGEMENT IN INDIA

10.1 NEED FOR A RESEARCH BLOG

Information about all aspects of waste management should be laid out for the Citizens of India to make informed decisions. Public knowledge sphere holds enormous quantities of misinformation, which is easily available. It is due to such information or a lack of any information that some environmental initiatives are opposed or are not welcome. Academic research helps clear some of that fog. However, it is necessary that academic research finds easier ways to create awareness, because awareness inspires action. Most environmental movements in the world happen at the grassroots level fuelled by general observations and research findings. Environmental regulations in United States and the MSW rules 2000 in India are some examples of the results of public awareness. The easiest way for general public to know about any topic of interest is through a simple internet search. Internet is the major source of information for public more often than ever before (Figure 39). Whenever someone needs information, they will go to the Google search engine and type the words they want to know about and get those search results above, most likely clicking on the top link first. (63)
4.5 4 3.5 3 2.5 2 1.5 1 0.5 0 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011

Search Volume Index

"Municipal Solid Waste" Search Volume Figure 39, Internet Search for "Solid Waste Management", Source: Google Trends

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Among world cities, majority of the searches (in English) on Solid Waste Management were from Indian cities (Figure 40). This represents a growing interest about SWM and the increasing role of internet in India. Academic research should be among the top links. This is possible through blogging because information in Blogs is easily searchable on most search engines.

Figure 40, Internet Searches for "Solid Waste Management" from Different Cities, Source: Google Trends

10.2 BLOG DESCRIPTION AND STATISTICS

The research blog Solid Waste Management in India (www.SWMIndia.blogspot.com) was started in May 2009 to achieve the above discussed objectives (Section 10.1). Findings were regularly updated on the blog in the form of new posts, tables and figures. Pictures taken during research visits (whether used/not used in the posts) were made available in full size in a separate page called Media, so that they could be easily downloadable. This entire thesis report will also be updated on the blog, section-wise. All references used were also provided at the bottom. The blog is attributed to EEC and WTERT, the sponsors of this work on the opening page (Figure 41) and at the bottom of the blog. Those who wanted to contact the Author were asked to do it by leaving their query in the comments section so that those queries could be tracked by others too. Those who wanted to use the excel sheets in the posts were asked to note their requirement with their email address in the comments section.

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Figure 41, Opening Page of the Blog, www.SwmIndia.blogspot.com

The blog also had a News Reel application installed on the right hand side corner to provide blog viewers with latest news regarding waste management in India. Feedback from viewers proved it to be a useful tool. Maintaining blogs to share research findings is useful for current and future research. It provides real-time statistics and gives a better understanding on what the public thinks. It also provides the researcher with feedback and suggestions from blog readers. Academic research generally gets confined to papers, journals and conferences. The general public, kids doing school projects, parents, and anyone else who is not a research scientist will never see those. They will not go check the scientific literature in Google Scholar. They wouldnt even have access to the articles if they did. (63) Information in a blog is easily searchable on search engines like Google (Figure 42), Yahoo (Figure 43), Bing (Figure 44), Altavista (Figure 45), etc., which helps disseminating the information faster.

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Figure 42, Top Results for "Solid Waste Management in India on Google Search

Figure 44, Top Results for "Solid Waste Management in India on Bing Search

Figure 43, Top Results for "Solid Waste Management in India on Yahoo Search

Figure 45, Top Results for "Solid Waste Management in India on Altavista Search

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10.3 PAGE VIEWS AND AUDIENCE 10.3.1 VIEWS

The first post on the blog was published in September, 2009. The number of page views went up since then. As of Dec, 2011, the blog is viewed by 3,000 visitors every month. The number of page views depended upon the amount of new content that was being posted. The dip in viewership around February, 2011 was possibly due to no new posts. The viewership also depended whether the blog included the kind of information the public was searching for. The number of page views has crossed 1,000 for the first time in June, 2011 and has been above that mark ever since. The page views for October, 2011 might be greater than 1,000 by the end of the month. Number of page views represents trending topics and public awareness on those topics and not necessarily the quality of the post.

Figure 46, Number of All-time Page Views of the Blog since its First Post in September, 09

10.3.2 AUDIENCE

The blog was visited by viewers from more than 13 countries including India. Indians have visited the blog the most. Foreign viewership might indicate a combination of a) interest in SWM in India in particular and b) interest in SWM in general. A simple search for Solid Waste Management Google Trends showed that that term was most searched from Indian Cities compared to cities from any other country (Figure 40). Page | 124

Figure 47, Geographic Distribution of Audience to the Blog since its Creation in May, 09

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10.3.3 SEARCH KEYWORDS

Figure 48, Distribution of the Search Keywords used by Public to find this Information (Blog)

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10.3.4 POSTS

Figure 49, Distribution of the Number of Views per Article Posted on the Blog

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10.3.5 COMMENTS AND INTERACTION

Blog viewers were encouraged to ask questions and provide input. Those with inputs or questions were asked to mention them in the comments section of respective posts. All questions were answered right there in the comments section to keep the discussion and conclusions open to other viewers. The answers included elaborate explanations where required. Those viewers who required detailed answers were asked to share their email ids.

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APPENDICES APPENDIX 1, WASTE GENERATION QUANTITIES AND RATES IN 366 INDIAN CITIES IN 2001 AND 2011
2001 S.No. State City Class (2011 Population) Population Per capita Waste generation (kg/day) MSW Generated (TPD) Population 2011 Per Capita Waste Generation (kg/day) MSW Generated (TPD)

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19

Maharashtra West Bengal Delhi Tamil Nadu Andhra Pradesh Karnataka Gujarat Maharashtra Gujarat Uttar Pradesh Rajasthan Uttar Pradesh Maharashtra Bihar Madhya Pradesh Gujarat Maharashtra Tamil Nadu Madhya Pradesh

Greater Mumbai Greater Kolkata Delhi Chennai Greater Hyderabad Greater Bengaluru Ahmadabad Pune Surat Kanpur Jaipur Lucknow Nagpur Patna Indore Vadodara Pimpri Chinchwad Coimbatore Bhopal

Metro Metro Metro Metro Metro Metro Class A Class A Class A Class A Class A Class A Class A Class A Class A Class A Class A Class A Class A

16,434,386 13,205,697 12,877,470 6,560,242 5,742,036 5,701,446 4,525,013 3,760,636 2,811,614 2,715,555 2,322,575 2,245,509 2,129,500 1,697,976 1,516,918 1,491,045 1,470,010 1,461,139 1,458,416

0.450 0.580 0.570 0.620 0.570 0.390 0.370 0.460 0.410 0.430 0.390 0.220 0.250 0.370 0.380 0.270 0.245 0.570 0.400

7,395 7,659 7,340 4,067 3,273 2,224 1,674 1,730 1,153 1,168 906 494 532 628 576 403 360 833 583

21,660,521 17,405,109 16,972,505 8,646,399 7,568,003 7,514,506 5,963,967 4,956,518 3,705,707 3,579,101 3,061,154 2,959,581 2,806,681 2,237,932 1,999,298 1,965,197 1,937,473 1,925,781 1,922,192

0.514 0.662 0.650 0.708 0.650 0.445 0.422 0.525 0.468 0.491 0.445 0.251 0.285 0.422 0.434 0.308 0.279 0.650 0.456

11,124 11,520 11,040 6,118 4,923 3,344 2,518 2,602 1,734 1,756 1,362 743 801 945 867 606 541 1,253 877

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S.No.

State

City

Class (2011 Population)

Population

2001 Per capita Waste generation (kg/day)

MSW Generated (TPD)

Population

2011 Per Capita Waste Generation (kg/day)

MSW Generated (TPD)

21 Kerala 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 Andhra Pradesh Uttar Pradesh Maharashtra Uttar Pradesh Tamil Nadu Maharashtra Uttar Pradesh Maharashtra Jharkhand Madhya Pradesh West Bengal Jharkhand Haryana Uttar Pradesh Andhra Pradesh Punjab Gujarat Jammu & Kashmir Uttar Pradesh Chhattisgarh Maharashtra

Kochi Greater Visakhapatnam Agra Thane Varanasi Madurai Kalyan-Dombivali Meerut Nashik Jamshedpur Jabalpur Asansol Dhanbad Faridabad Allahabad Vijayawada Amritsar Rajkot Srinagar Ghaziabad Durg-Bhilainagar Aurangabad

Class A Class A Class A Class A Class A Class A Class A Class A Class A Class A Class A Class A Class A Class A Class A Class A Class A Class A Class B Class B Class B Class B

1,355,972 1,345,938 1,331,339 1,261,517 1,203,961 1,203,095 1,193,266 1,161,716 1,152,326 1,104,713 1,098,000 1,067,369 1,065,327 1,055,938 1,042,229 1,039,518 1,003,917 1,003,015 988,210 968,256 927,864 892,483

0.670 0.590 0.510 0.390 0.390 0.300 0.358 0.460 0.190 0.310 0.230 0.440 0.390 0.420 0.520 0.440 0.450 0.210 0.480 0.471 0.500 0.500

909 794 679 492 470 361 427 534 219 342 253 470 415 443 542 457 452 211 474 456 464 446

1,787,171 1,773,946 1,754,705 1,662,679 1,586,821 1,585,679 1,572,725 1,531,142 1,518,766 1,456,012 1,447,164 1,406,792 1,404,101 1,391,726 1,373,658 1,370,085 1,323,163 1,321,974 1,302,461 1,276,161 1,222,925 1,176,293

0.765 0.673 0.582 0.445 0.445 0.342 0.408 0.525 0.217 0.354 0.262 0.502 0.445 0.479 0.593 0.502 0.514 0.240 0.548 0.537 0.571 0.570

1,366 1,194 1,021 740 706 543 642 804 329 515 380 706 625 667 815 688 679 317 713 686 698 671

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S.No.

State

City

Class (2011 Population)

Population

2001 Per capita Waste generation (kg/day)

MSW Generated (TPD)

Population

2011 Per Capita Waste Generation (kg/day)

MSW Generated (TPD)

Kerala Maharashtra Kerala Madhya Pradesh Jharkhand Rajasthan Assam Chandigarh Karnataka Karnataka Tamil Nadu Uttar Pradesh Punjab Rajasthan Chhattisgarh Uttar Pradesh Orissa Uttar Pradesh Uttar Pradesh Maharashtra Jammu & 64 Kashmir 65 Orissa 66 Andhra Pradesh 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63

Kozhikode Solapur Thrissur Gwalior Ranchi Jodhpur Guwahati Chandigarh Mysore Hubli-Dharwad Salem Bareilly Jalandhar Kota Raipur Aligarh Bhubaneswar Moradabad Gorakhpur Bhiwandi Jammu Cuttack Warangal

Class B Class B Class B Class B Class B Class B Class B Class B Class B Class B Class B Class B Class B Class B Class B Class C Class C Class C Class C Class C Class C Class C Class C

880,247 872,478 866,354 865,548 863,495 860,818 818,809 808,515 799,228 786,195 751,438 748,353 714,077 703,150 700,113 669,087 658,220 641,583 622,701 621,427 612,163 587,182 579,216

0.324 0.401 0.177 0.350 0.250 0.609 0.200 0.400 0.459 0.509 0.446 0.421 0.493 0.617 0.300 0.448 0.360 0.452 0.454 0.500 0.580 0.296 0.525

285 350 153 303 216 524 164 323 367 400 335 315 352 434 210 300 237 290 283 311 355 174 304

1,160,166 1,149,926 1,141,855 1,140,792 1,138,086 1,134,558 1,079,190 1,065,623 1,053,383 1,036,205 990,395 986,329 941,153 926,752 922,749 881,857 867,534 845,606 820,720 819,041 806,831 773,906 763,407

0.369 0.458 0.202 0.400 0.285 0.695 0.228 0.456 0.524 0.581 0.509 0.480 0.562 0.704 0.342 0.512 0.411 0.516 0.519 0.571 0.662 0.338 0.599

429 526 230 456 325 788 246 486 552 602 504 474 529 653 316 451 356 436 426 467 534 262 457

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S.No.

State

City

Class (2011 Population)

Population

2001 Per capita Waste generation (kg/day)

MSW Generated (TPD)

Population

2011 Per Capita Waste Generation (kg/day)

MSW Generated (TPD)

68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91

Tamil Nadu Maharashtra Karnataka Uttarakhand Rajasthan Gujarat Andhra Pradesh Karnataka Pondicherry Maharashtra Jharkhand West Bengal Rajasthan Orissa Maharashtra West Bengal Uttar Pradesh Uttar Pradesh Maharashtra West Bengal Tamil Nadu Uttar Pradesh Madhya Pradesh Maharashtra

Tiruppur Amravati Mangalore Dehradun Bikaner Bhavnagar Guntur Belgaum Pondicherry Kolhapur Bokaro Durgapur Ajmer Raurkela Ulhasnagar Siliguri Jhansi Saharanpur Sangli Bhatpara Tirunelveli Firozabad Ujjain Nanded

Class C Class C Class C Class C Class C Class C Class C Class C Class C Class C Class D Class D Class D Class D Class D Class D Class D Class D Class D Class D Class D Class D Class D Class D

550,826 549,510 539,387 530,263 529,690 517,708 514,461 506,480 505,959 505,541 497,780 493,405 490,520 484,874 472,943 472,374 460,278 455,754 447,774 441,956 433,352 432,866 431,162 430,733

0.533 0.273 0.500 0.310 0.453 0.327 0.386 0.395 0.590 0.383 0.351 0.351 0.555 0.330 0.357 0.350 0.374 0.448 0.427 0.305 0.480 0.352 0.369 0.350

293 150 270 164 240 169 199 200 299 194 175 173 272 160 169 165 172 204 191 135 208 152 159 151

725,989 724,254 710,912 698,887 698,131 682,339 678,060 667,541 666,854 666,303 656,074 650,308 646,505 639,064 623,339 622,589 606,646 600,684 590,166 582,498 571,158 570,517 568,272 567,706

0.608 0.312 0.570 0.354 0.517 0.373 0.441 0.451 0.673 0.438 0.400 0.400 0.633 0.376 0.408 0.399 0.426 0.511 0.488 0.349 0.548 0.401 0.421 0.399

441 226 405 247 361 254 299 301 449 292 263 260 409 240 254 249 259 307 288 203 313 229 239 227

Page | 132

S.No.

State

City

Class (2011 Population)

Population

2001 Per capita Waste generation (kg/day)

MSW Generated (TPD)

Population

2011 Per Capita Waste Generation (kg/day)

MSW Generated (TPD)

92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115

Karnataka Andhra Pradesh Maharashtra Andhra Pradesh Maharashtra Bihar Tamil Nadu Rajasthan West Bengal Tamil Nadu Kerala Andhra Pradesh Maharashtra Karnataka Haryana Bihar West Bengal Maharashtra Andhra Pradesh Maharashtra West Bengal Chhattisgarh Uttar Pradesh Tamil Nadu

Gulbarga Rajahmundry Malegaon Nellore Akola Gaya Erode Udaipur Maheshtala Vellore Kollam Kakinada Jalgaon Davangere Panipat Bhagalpur Panihati Ahmadnagar Kurnool Dhule Rajpur Sonarpur Bilaspur Muzaffarnagar Tiruchirapalli

Class D Class D Class D Class D Class D Class E Class E Class E Class E Class E Class E Class E Class E Class E Class E Class E Class E Class E Class E Class E Class E Class E Class E Class B

430,265 413,616 409,403 404,775 400,520 394,945 389,906 389,438 389,214 386,746 380,091 376,861 368,618 364,523 354,148 350,133 348,379 347,549 342,973 341,755 336,390 335,293 331,668 866,354

0.504 0.365 0.350 0.494 0.350 0.380 0.540 0.430 0.306 0.502 0.505 0.372 0.375 0.214 0.376 0.351 0.307 0.311 0.412 0.349 0.303 0.589 0.370 0.371

217 151 143 200 140 150 210 167 119 194 192 140 138 185 133 123 107 108 141 119 102 197 123 357

567,089 545,146 539,593 533,493 527,885 520,538 513,896 513,279 512,984 509,731 500,960 496,703 485,839 480,441 466,767 461,475 459,164 458,070 452,038 450,433 443,362 441,916 437,138 1,141,855

0.576 0.417 0.400 0.564 0.400 0.433 0.616 0.491 0.349 0.573 0.576 0.424 0.428 0.244 0.429 0.400 0.351 0.355 0.470 0.399 0.346 0.672 0.423 0.423

326 227 216 301 211 226 316 252 179 292 289 211 208 117 200 185 161 162 212 180 153 297 185 483

Page | 133

S.No.

State

City

Class (2011 Population)

Population

2001 Per capita Waste generation (kg/day)

MSW Generated (TPD)

Population

2011 Per Capita Waste Generation (kg/day)

MSW Generated (TPD)

117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140

Uttar Pradesh Uttar Pradesh Karnataka Chhattisgarh Tamil Nadu Madhya Pradesh Orissa Haryana Bihar Uttar Pradesh Andhra Pradesh Maharashtra Haryana West Bengal Maharashtra Andhra Pradesh Maharashtra West Bengal Kerala Uttar Pradesh Rajasthan Karnataka West Bengal Meghalaya

Mathura Shahjahanpur Bellary Korba Ambattur Sagar Brahmapur Yamunanagar Muzaffarpur Noida Tirupati Latur Rohtak Kulti Chandrapur Nizamabad Ichalkarnji Barddhaman Alappuzha Rampur Bhilwara Shimoga Kharagpur Shillong

Class E Class E Class E Class E Class E Class E Class E Class E Class E Class E Class E Class F Class F Class F Class F Class F Class F Class F Class F Class F Class F Class F Class F Class F

323,315 321,885 316,766 315,690 310,967 308,922 307,792 306,740 305,525 305,058 303,521 299,985 294,577 290,057 289,450 288,722 285,860 285,602 282,675 281,494 280,128 274,352 272,865 267,662

0.349 0.414 0.505 0.348 0.229 0.421 0.351 0.386 0.350 0.350 0.343 0.403 0.349 0.303 0.351 0.379 0.351 0.350 0.503 0.350 0.351 0.499 0.348 0.340

113 133 160 110 160 130 108 118 107 107 104 121 103 88 102 109 100 100 142 98 98 137 95 91

426,129 424,244 417,498 416,079 409,855 407,159 405,670 404,283 402,682 402,066 400,041 395,380 388,252 382,295 381,495 380,536 376,763 376,423 372,566 371,009 369,209 361,596 359,636 352,779

0.398 0.473 0.576 0.397 0.261 0.480 0.400 0.440 0.399 0.400 0.392 0.460 0.398 0.346 0.400 0.432 0.401 0.399 0.575 0.399 0.400 0.569 0.398 0.388

170 201 241 165 107 195 162 178 161 161 157 182 154 132 153 164 151 150 214 148 148 206 143 137

Page | 134

S.No.

State

City

Class (2011 Population)

Population

2001 Per capita Waste generation (kg/day)

MSW Generated (TPD)

Population

2011 Per Capita Waste Generation (kg/day)

MSW Generated (TPD)

142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150

Rajasthan Haryana Andhra Pradesh Maharashtra Karnataka Gujarat West Bengal Manipur Karnataka

Tamil Nadu 151 152 Andhra Pradesh 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 Uttar Pradesh West Bengal Andhra Pradesh Maharashtra Madhya Pradesh Gujarat Bihar Madhya Pradesh Madhya Pradesh Haryana Mizoram

Alwar Hissar Cuddapah Parbhani Bijapur Junagadh Baranagar Imphal Tumkur Thoothukkudi (Tuticorin) Anantapur FarrukhabadFatehgarh Habra Ramagundam Jalna Ratlam Navsari Bihar Sharif Dewas Satna Gurgaon Aizwal

Class F Class F Class F Class F Class F Class F Class F Class F Class F Class F Class F Class F Class F Class F Class F Class F Class F Class F Class F Class F Class F Class F

266,203 263,186 262,506 259,329 253,891 252,108 250,615 250,234 248,929 243,415 243,143 242,997 239,209 237,686 235,795 234,419 232,411 232,071 231,672 229,307 228,820 228,280

0.362 0.349 0.363 0.351 0.499 0.392 0.303 0.190 0.502 0.499 0.383 0.424 0.353 0.418 0.351 0.351 0.352 0.352 0.350 0.351 0.456 0.250

96 92 95 91 127 99 76 48 125 122 93 103 84 99 83 82 82 82 81 81 104 57

350,856 346,879 345,983 341,796 334,628 332,278 330,311 329,808 328,088 320,821 320,462 320,270 315,277 313,270 310,778 308,964 306,318 305,870 305,344 302,227 301,585 300,873

0.414 0.398 0.414 0.400 0.569 0.447 0.346 0.217 0.573 0.570 0.437 0.484 0.403 0.477 0.401 0.401 0.402 0.401 0.400 0.401 0.521 0.285

145 138 143 137 190 149 114 72 188 183 140 155 127 149 125 124 123 123 122 121 157 86

Page | 135

S.No.

State

City

Class (2011 Population)

Population

2001 Per capita Waste generation (kg/day)

MSW Generated (TPD)

Population

2011 Per Capita Waste Generation (kg/day)

MSW Generated (TPD)

165 166 167 168 169 170 171 172 173 174 175 176 177 178 179 180 181 182 183 184 185 186 187

Haryana West Bengal Rajasthan Haryana Uttarakhand Gujarat Andhra Pradesh Punjab Andhra Pradesh West Bengal Tamil Nadu Uttar Pradesh Uttar Pradesh Uttar Pradesh Tamil Nadu Uttar Pradesh Karnataka Rajasthan Uttar Pradesh Maharashtra Bihar Andhra Pradesh Gujarat

Sonipat English Bazar Ganganagar Karnal Hardwar Anand Karimnagar Bathinda Eluru Naihati Thanjavur Maunath Bhanjan Hapur Etawah Nagercoil Faizabad Raichur Bharathpur Mirzapur Vindhyachal Ambarnath Arrah Khammam Porbandar

Class F Class F Class F Class F Class F Class F Class F Class F Class F Class F Class F Class F Class F Class F Class F Class F Class F Class F Class F Class F Class F Class G Class G

225,074 224,415 222,858 221,236 220,767 218,486 218,302 217,256 215,804 215,432 215,314 212,657 211,983 210,453 208,179 208,162 207,421 205,235 205,053 203,795 203,380 198,620 197,382

0.350 0.348 0.391 0.372 0.366 0.349 0.501 0.369 0.417 0.306 0.438 0.350 0.352 0.351 0.499 0.353 0.436 0.350 0.352 0.358 0.350 0.615 0.254

79 78 87 82 81 76 109 80 90 66 94 74 75 74 104 73 90 72 72 73 71 122 50

296,648 295,779 293,727 291,589 290,971 287,965 287,722 286,343 284,430 283,939 283,784 280,282 279,394 277,377 274,380 274,358 273,381 270,500 270,260 268,602 268,055 261,781 260,149

0.399 0.397 0.446 0.425 0.417 0.399 0.572 0.421 0.476 0.350 0.500 0.399 0.402 0.401 0.570 0.403 0.497 0.400 0.402 0.409 0.400 0.702 0.290

118 117 131 124 121 115 164 121 135 99 142 112 112 111 156 110 136 108 109 110 107 184 75

Page | 136

S.No.

State

City

Class (2011 Population)

Population

2001 Per capita Waste generation (kg/day)

MSW Generated (TPD)

Population

2011 Per Capita Waste Generation (kg/day)

MSW Generated (TPD)

189 190 191 192 193 194 195 196 197 198 199 200 201 202 203 204 205 206 207 208 209 210 211 212

Bihar Tamil Nadu Gujarat Gujarat Andhra Pradesh Madhya Pradesh Bihar Tripura Tamil Nadu Bihar Rajasthan Maharashtra Madhya Pradesh Rajasthan Madhya Pradesh Assam Madhya Pradesh Uttar Pradesh Andhra Pradesh Bihar Uttar Pradesh Gujarat West Bengal Karnataka

Purnia Dindigul Nadiad Gandhinagar Vizianagaram Burhanpur Katihar Agartala Kancheepuram Munger Pali Bhusawal Murwara (Katni) Sikar Singrauli Silchar Rewa Sambhal Machilipatnam Chapra Bulandshahar Bharuch Raiganj Bidar

Class G Class G Class G Class G Class G Class G Class G Class G Class G Class G Class G Class G Class G Class G Class G Class G Class G Class G Class G Class G Class G Class G Class G Class G

197,211 196,955 196,793 195,985 195,801 193,725 190,873 189,998 188,733 188,050 187,641 187,564 187,029 185,925 185,190 184,105 183,274 182,478 179,353 179,190 176,425 176,364 175,047 174,257

0.349 0.502 0.348 0.220 0.368 0.352 0.353 0.400 0.501 0.350 0.396 0.348 0.349 0.351 0.356 0.350 0.348 0.386 0.498 0.351 0.403 0.362 0.349 0.546

69 99 69 43 72 68 67 76 95 66 74 65 65 65 66 64 64 70 89 63 71 64 61 95

259,924 259,587 259,373 258,308 258,066 255,330 251,571 250,417 248,750 247,850 247,311 247,209 246,504 245,049 244,080 242,650 241,555 240,506 236,387 236,172 232,528 232,448 230,712 229,671

0.398 0.573 0.398 0.251 0.420 0.402 0.403 0.456 0.571 0.399 0.452 0.397 0.399 0.400 0.407 0.400 0.397 0.440 0.569 0.400 0.460 0.414 0.398 0.623

103 149 103 65 108 103 101 114 142 99 112 98 98 98 99 97 96 106 134 95 107 96 92 143

Page | 137

S.No.

State

City

Class (2011 Population)

Population

2001 Per capita Waste generation (kg/day)

MSW Generated (TPD)

Population

2011 Per Capita Waste Generation (kg/day)

MSW Generated (TPD)

214 215 216 217 218 219 220 221 222 223 224 225 226 227 228 229 230 231 232 233 234 235 236

West Bengal West Bengal Haryana Uttar Pradesh Punjab Uttar Pradesh Uttar Pradesh Karnataka Andhra Pradesh Tamil Nadu Haryana Karnataka Uttar Pradesh Uttarakhand Tamil Nadu Gujarat Orissa Andhra Pradesh Karnataka Orissa Gujarat Karnataka Andhra Pradesh

Haldia Baharampur Bhiwani Rae Bareli Pathankot Bahraich Amroha Hosepet Adoni Kumbakonam Sirsa Bhadravati Jaunpur Haldwani-cumKathgodam Cuddalore Veraval Puri Nandyal Robertson Pet Baleshwar Dudhrej Gadag-Betigeri Ongole

Class G Class G Class G Class G Class G Class G Class G Class G Class G Class G Class G Class G Class G Class G Class G Class G Class G Class G Class G Class G Class G Class G Class G

170,673 170,322 169,531 169,333 168,485 168,323 165,129 164,240 162,458 160,767 160,735 160,662 160,055 158,896 158,634 158,032 157,837 157,120 157,084 156,430 156,417 154,982 153,829

0.353 0.347 0.353 0.350 0.353 0.383 0.398 0.500 0.502 0.502 0.352 0.723 0.383 0.390 0.497 0.351 0.573 0.428 0.490 0.347 0.482 0.502 0.499

60 59 60 59 59 64 66 82 82 81 57 116 61 62 79 55 91 67 77 54 75 78 77

224,947 224,484 223,442 223,181 222,063 221,850 217,640 216,468 214,120 211,891 211,849 211,753 210,952 209,425 209,080 208,286 208,029 207,084 207,037 206,175 206,158 204,266 202,747

0.403 0.396 0.402 0.400 0.403 0.437 0.455 0.570 0.573 0.573 0.402 0.825 0.437 0.445 0.567 0.400 0.654 0.488 0.559 0.396 0.550 0.573 0.570

91 89 90 89 89 97 99 123 123 121 85 175 92 93 119 83 136 101 116 82 113 117 116

Page | 138

S.No.

State

City

Class (2011 Population)

Population

2001 Per capita Waste generation (kg/day)

MSW Generated (TPD)

Population

2011 Per Capita Waste Generation (kg/day)

MSW Generated (TPD)

238 239 240 241 242 243 244 245 246 247 248 249 250 251 252 253 254 255 256 257 258 259 260

Madhya Pradesh Madhya Pradesh Andhra Pradesh Uttar Pradesh Uttar Pradesh Madhya Pradesh Andhra Pradesh West Bengal Punjab West Bengal Uttar Pradesh Punjab Madhya Pradesh Himachal Pradesh Uttar Pradesh West Bengal Chhattisgarh West Bengal Andhra Pradesh Uttar Pradesh Maharashtra Andhra Pradesh Uttar Pradesh

Bhind Chhindwara Chittoor Fatehpur Sitapur Morena Proddatur Medinipur Hoshiarpur Krishna Nagar Budaun Batala Shivpuri Shimla Unnao Barrackpur Rajnandgaon Balurghat Bhimavaram Modinagar Yavatmal Mahbubnagar Banda

Class G Class G Class G Class G Class G Class G Class G Class H Class H Class H Class H Class H Class H Class H Class H Class H Class H Class H Class H Class H Class H Class H Class H

153,752 153,552 152,654 152,078 151,908 150,959 150,309 149,769 149,668 148,709 148,029 147,872 146,892 144,975 144,662 144,331 143,770 143,321 142,064 139,929 139,835 139,662 139,436

0.349 0.287 0.356 0.357 0.403 0.349 0.421 0.342 0.334 0.350 0.480 0.331 0.347 0.270 0.377 0.305 0.351 0.353 0.395 0.362 0.353 0.337 0.466

54 44 54 54 61 53 63 51 50 52 71 49 51 39 55 44 50 51 56 51 49 47 65

202,645 202,382 201,198 200,439 200,215 198,964 198,107 197,396 197,262 195,998 195,102 194,895 193,604 191,077 190,665 190,228 189,489 188,897 187,240 184,426 184,303 184,075 183,777

0.398 0.327 0.406 0.407 0.460 0.398 0.480 0.391 0.381 0.400 0.547 0.378 0.396 0.308 0.430 0.348 0.400 0.403 0.450 0.414 0.402 0.384 0.532

81 66 82 82 92 79 95 77 75 78 107 74 77 59 82 66 76 76 84 76 74 71 98

Page | 139

S.No.

State

City

Class (2011 Population)

Population

2001 Per capita Waste generation (kg/day)

MSW Generated (TPD)

Population

2011 Per Capita Waste Generation (kg/day)

MSW Generated (TPD)

262 263 264 265 266 267 268 269 270 271 272 273 274 275 276 277 278 279 280 281 282 283 284 285

Haryana Haryana West Bengal Maharashtra Tamil Nadu Assam Madhya Pradesh Haryana Rajasthan Jharkhand Punjab Karnataka Haryana Karnataka Gujarat Bihar Tamil Nadu Bihar Rajasthan West Bengal Andhra Pradesh West Bengal Madhya Pradesh Karnataka

Ambala Sadar Ambala Santipur Beed Neyveli Dibrugarh Guna Jind Tonk Hazaribagh Moga Hassan Bahadurgarh Mandya Godhra Sasaram Tiruvannamalai Dinapur Nizamat Hanumangarh Jamuria Adilabad Bankura Damoh Udupi

Class H Class H Class H Class H Class H Class H Class H Class H Class H Class H Class H Class H Class H Class H Class H Class H Class H Class H Class H Class H Class H Class H Class H Class H

139,279 139,279 138,235 138091 138,035 137,661 137,175 135,855 135,689 135,473 135,279 133,262 131,925 131,179 131,172 131,172 130,567 130,339 129,556 129,456 129,403 128,781 127,967 127,124

0.216 0.366 0.352 0.347 0.392 0.349 0.352 0.493 0.431 0.288 0.364 0.457 0.448 0.399 0.352 0.327 0.422 0.305 0.494 0.301 0.440 0.348 0.354 0.500

54 51 49 48 54 48 48 67 58 39 49 61 58 52 46 40 55 40 64 39 58 45 45 64

183,570 183,570 182,194 182,004 181,930 181,437 180,797 179,057 178,838 178,553 178,298 175,639 173,877 172,894 172,885 172,885 172,087 171,787 170,755 170,623 170,553 169,733 168,661 167,549

0.246 0.418 0.402 0.396 0.447 0.398 0.402 0.563 0.492 0.329 0.415 0.521 0.511 0.456 0.402 0.373 0.482 0.348 0.564 0.344 0.502 0.397 0.404 0.570

45 77 73 72 81 72 73 101 88 59 74 92 89 79 70 65 83 60 96 59 86 67 68 96

Page | 140

S.No.

State

City

Class (2011 Population)

Population

2001 Per capita Waste generation (kg/day)

MSW Generated (TPD)

Population

2011 Per Capita Waste Generation (kg/day)

MSW Generated (TPD)

287 288 289 290 291 292 293 294 295 296 297 298 299 300 301 302 303 304 305 306 307 308 309 310

Rajasthan Madhya Pradesh West Bengal Karnataka Bihar Andhra Pradesh Punjab Uttar Pradesh West Bengal Assam West Bengal Haryana Tamil Nadu Gujarat Uttar Pradesh Uttar Pradesh Maharashtra Uttar Pradesh Bihar Jharkhand Bihar Madhya Pradesh Andhra Pradesh Haryana

Beawar Vidisha Nabadwip Chitradurga Saharsa Hindupur Abohar Pilibhit North Barrackpur Nagaon Raniganj Thanesar Rajapalayam Palanpur Lakhimpur Loni Gondiya Gonda Hajipur Adityapur Dehri Mandsaur Srikakulam Kaithal

Class H Class H Class H Class H Class H Class H Class H Class H Class H Class H Class H Class H Class H Class H Class H Class H Class H Class H Class H Class H Class H Class H Class H Class H

125,981 125,453 125,341 125,170 125,167 125,074 124,339 124,245 123523 123,265 122,891 122,319 122,307 122,300 121,486 120,945 120,902 120,301 119,412 119221 119,057 117,555 117,320 117,285

0.493 0.359 0.352 0.498 0.354 0.435 0.364 0.402 0.352 0.260 0.350 0.490 0.464 0.307 0.486 0.480 0.376 0.482 0.353 0.310 0.359 0.349 0.503 0.486

62 45 44 62 38 54 45 50 38 32 43 59 57 40 59 58 45 59 37 37 36 41 59 57

166,043 165,347 165,199 164,974 164,970 164,848 163,879 163,755 162,803 162,463 161,970 161,216 161,201 161,191 160,119 159,406 159,349 158,557 157,385 157,133 156,917 154,937 154,628 154,582

0.562 0.409 0.402 0.568 0.404 0.496 0.415 0.459 0.401 0.296 0.399 0.560 0.529 0.350 0.554 0.547 0.429 0.550 0.403 0.354 0.410 0.398 0.574 0.555

93 68 66 94 67 82 68 75 65 48 65 90 85 56 89 87 68 87 63 56 64 62 89 86

Page | 141

S.No.

State

City

Class (2011 Population)

Population

2001 Per capita Waste generation (kg/day)

MSW Generated (TPD)

Population

2011 Per Capita Waste Generation (kg/day)

MSW Generated (TPD)

312 313 314 315 316 317 318 319 320 321 322 323 324 325 326 327 328 329 330 331 332 333 334

Maharashtra Bihar Rajasthan Chhattisgarh Karnataka West Bengal Gujarat Gujarat West Bengal Andhra Pradesh Madhya Pradesh Uttar Pradesh Gujarat Uttar Pradesh West Bengal Andhra Pradesh Maharashtra Bihar Tamil Nadu West Bengal Bihar Maharashtra Uttar Pradesh

Navghar-Manikpur Bettiah Kishangarh Raigarh Kolar Puruliya Patan Vejalpur Basirhat Gudivada Neemuch Hardoi Kalol Lalitpur Ashoknagar Kalyangarh Nalgonda Wardha Siwan Pudukkottai Darjiling Motihari Satara Basti

Class H Class H Class H Class H Class H Class H Class H Class H Class H Class H Class H Class H Class H Class H Class H Class H Class H Class H Class H Class H Class H Class H Class H

116700 116,670 116,222 115,908 113,907 113,806 113,749 113304 113,159 113,054 112,852 112,486 112,013 111,892 111475 111,380 111,118 109,919 109,217 108,830 108,428 108,048 107,601

0.360 0.300 0.542 0.343 0.498 0.312 0.336 0.353 0.349 0.398 0.337 0.388 0.308 0.483 0.305 0.539 0.354 0.336 0.531 0.300 0.309 0.358 0.477

42 35 56 39 57 35 39 40 40 45 38 54 35 54 34 60 39 33 58 33 31 38 51

153,811 153,771 153,181 152,767 150,129 149,996 149,921 149,335 149,144 149,005 148,739 148,257 147,633 147,474 146,924 146,799 146,454 144,873 143,948 143,438 142,908 142,407 141,818

0.411 0.342 0.618 0.391 0.568 0.357 0.384 0.403 0.399 0.454 0.384 0.442 0.351 0.551 0.348 0.615 0.403 0.384 0.606 0.343 0.353 0.408 0.544

63 53 95 60 85 53 58 60 59 68 57 66 52 81 51 90 59 56 87 49 50 58 77

Page | 142

S.No.

State

City

Class (2011 Population)

Population

2001 Per capita Waste generation (kg/day)

MSW Generated (TPD)

Population

2011 Per Capita Waste Generation (kg/day)

MSW Generated (TPD)

Uttar Pradesh Punjab Gujarat Maharashtra Gujarat Uttar Pradesh Uttar Pradesh Andhra Pradesh Punjab Andhra Pradesh West Bengal Uttar Pradesh Haryana Karnataka Haryana Haryana Rajasthan West Bengal Gujarat Uttar Pradesh Andaman & 356 Nicobar 357 Goa 358 Nagaland 336 337 338 339 340 341 342 343 344 345 346 347 348 349 350 351 352 353 354 355

Etah Malerkotla Ghatlodiya Barshi Jetpur Navagadh Deoria Chandausi Dharmavaram Khanna Tadepalligudem Bangaon Ballia Jagadhri Chikmagalur Palwal Rewari Jhunjhunun Jalpaiguri Botad Sultanpur Port Blair Panaji Dimapur

Class H Class H Class H Class H Class H Class H Class H Class H Class H Class H Class H Class H Class H Class H Class H Class H Class H Class H Class H Class H Class 2 Class 2 Class 2

107,110 107,009 106259 104,785 104,312 104,227 103,749 103,357 103,099 102,622 102,163 101,465 101300 101,251 100,722 100,684 100,485 100,348 100,194 100,065 99,984 99,677 98,096

0.485 0.545 0.308 0.310 0.355 0.482 0.480 0.358 0.485 0.543 0.286 0.483 0.484 0.536 0.486 0.487 0.179 0.303 0.302 0.480 0.760 0.540 0.303

52 51 38 37 37 50 50 56 50 55 31 49 49 55 49 49 48 31 36 48 76 54 33

141,171 141,038 140,049 138,107 137,483 137,371 136,741 136,225 135,884 135,256 134,651 133,731 133,513 133,449 132,752 132,702 132,439 132,259 132,056 131,886 131,779 131,374 129,291

0.554 0.622 0.351 0.354 0.405 0.550 0.547 0.409 0.553 0.620 0.326 0.551 0.552 0.612 0.555 0.555 0.205 0.346 0.345 0.547 0.867 0.616 0.346

78 88 49 49 56 76 75 56 75 84 44 74 74 82 74 74 27 46 46 72 114 81 45

Page | 143

S.No.

State

City

Class (2011 Population)

Population

2001 Per capita Waste generation (kg/day)

MSW Generated (TPD)

Population

2011 Per Capita Waste Generation (kg/day)

MSW Generated (TPD)

360 Maharashtra 361 Nagaland 362 Daman & Diu Arunachal 363 Pradesh 364 Sikkim Dadra & Nagar 365 Haveli 366 Lakshadweep

Navi Mumbai Kohima Daman Itanagar Gangtok Silvassa Kavarati

Class 2 Class 2 Class 3 Class 3 Class 3 Class 3 Class 4

81,855 77,030 35,770 35,022 29,354 21,893 10,119 197,313,948

0.474 0.170 0.420 0.340 0.440 0.320 0.300 0.439

289 13 15 12 13 7 3 86,657 31,629,961

107,885 101,526 47,145 46,159 38,689 28,855 13,337 260,059,784

0.541 0.194 0.479 0.388 0.502 0.365 0.342 0.498

58 20 23 18 19 11 5 129,593 47,301,346

TOTAL

Per year (TPY) Percentage increase in MSW generation since 2001

Per year (TPY) 49.54601535 = 50%

Page | 144

APPENDIX 2, MSW GENERATED CUMULATIVELY UNTIL 2021 BY THE 366 CITIES STUDIED AND MSW GENERATED BY ENTIRE URBAN INDIA

Year

Population of the 366 cities

Per Capita Waste Generation (kg/day)

Waste Generated by 366 Cities Tons/day 129,593 134,993 140,619 146,479 152,583 158,941 165,565 172,464 179,651 187,138 194,936 1,762,961 Tons/year 47,301,346 49,272,506 51,325,810 53,464,680 55,692,681 58,013,529 60,431,092 62,949,400 65,572,653 68,305,223 71,151,665 643,480,584

Waste Generated by entire Urban India Tons/day 185,132 192,847 200,884 209,255 217,975 227,059 236,521 246,377 256,644 267,339 278,480 2,518,515 Tons/year 67,573,351 70,389,295 73,322,585 76,378,114 79,560,973 82,876,470 86,330,131 89,927,715 93,675,218 97,578,890 101,645,236 919,257,977

2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021

260,059,784 0.498 267,341,458 0.505 274,827,018 0.512 282,522,175 0.518 290,432,796 0.525 298,564,914 0.532 306,924,732 0.539 315,518,624 0.547 324,353,146 0.554 333,435,034 0.561 342,771,215 0.569 Cumulative Waste Generated

Page | 145

APPENDIX 3, COMPARISON BETWEEN WASTE HANDLING TECHNIQUES IN 2008 AND 2010


MSW Generation (TPD) 2001 7,659 7,395 7,340 4,067 3,273 2,224 1,175 (1,730) 1,302 (1,674) 1,100 (1,168) 1,153 400 (909) 904 (905) 530 (833) 794 735 (741) 654 (679) 511 (628) 574 (583) 557 (576) 509 (542) 490 (534) 504 (532) 524 428 (474) 425 (470) 374 (457) 438 (452) 207 (470) 2011 12,060 11,645 11,558 6,404 5,154 3,501 2,724 2,636 1,839 1,815 1,431 1,426 1,311 1,250 1,167 1,069 989 919 908 853 841 838 825 747 739 720 711 706 Composting (TPD) or (YES/NO) 2008 700 YES NO YES 700 300 YES 500 YES YES NO YES YES NO NO NO YES 100 NO NO NO YES NO NO NO NO NO 2010 700 370 825 YES 40* 450 600 500 YES YES YES NO YES NO NO NO YES 100 YES NO NO YES 216 YES NO YES NO Biomethanati on (TPD) or (YES/NO) 2008 NO NO NO NO NO NO YES NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO YES NO NO 2010 NO YES YES NO NO NO YES NO NO NO 20** NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO YES NO NO NO NO NO YES NO RDF/ WTE (TPD) or (YES/NO) 2008 NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO 225* NO NO 2012 NO 80* 1350 NO 700* NO NO NO NO NO NO 500 NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO 225* NO LFG recovery 2008 NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO 2010 NO YES NO NO NO NO YES NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO YES NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO Sanitary Landfill 2008 NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO 2010 NO NO NO NO NO NO YES YES NO YES NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO YES NO NO NO NO Earth Cover 2008 YES YES NO YES NO NO NO YES YES NO NO YES YES NO NO NO NO NO NO YES NO NO NO NO NO YES NO 2010 YES YES NO YES NO NO YES YES YES YES NO YES YES NO NO NO NO NO NO YES NO NO YES NO NO NO YES Alignment/ Compaction 2008 NO YES YES NO YES NO YES YES NO NO NO YES NO YES NO YES NO YES YES YES NO NO NO NO YES YES YES 2010 NO YES YES NO YES NO YES YES NO YES NO YES NO YES NO YES NO YES YES YES NO NO YES NO NO YES YES -

S.No.

City

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 25 26 27 28 29

Greater Kolkata Greater Mumbai Delhi Chennai Greater Hyderabad Greater Bengaluru Pune Ahmadabad Kanpur Surat Kochi Jaipur Coimbatore Greater Visakhapatnam Ludhiana Agra Patna Bhopal Indore Allahabad Meerut Nagpur Jodhpur Srinagar Varanasi Vijayawada Amritsar Asansol

Page | 146

30
S.No.

Aurangabad

446

702

YES

NO

NO

NO

NO

NO

NO

City Dhanbad Mysore Madurai Pimpri Chinchwad Jammu Jalandhar Jamshedpur Chandigarh Bhiwandi Gwalior Tiruppur Navi Mumbai Pondicherry Mangalore Jabalpur Bhubaneshwar Nashik Ranchi Rajkot Raipur
Thiruvananthapuram

MSW Generation (TPD) 2001 77 (415) 367 275 (361) 360 215 (355) 352 338 (342) 326 (323) 311 303 293 289 130 (299) 270 216 (253) 234 (237) 200 (219) 208 (216) 207 (211) 184 (210) 171 (205) 199 194 169 167 131 (164) 166 (164) 138 45 (91) 76 77 (76) 57 2011 625 578 568 567 559 554 539 509 489 477 462 455 449 424 398 373 345 340 332 331 322 313 305 266 264 259 258 208 137 114 114 86

33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64

Guntur Kolhapur Bhavnagar Udaipur Dehradun Guwahati Jalgaon Shillong Port Blair Agartala Aizwal

Composting (TPD) or (YES/NO) 2008 2010 NO YES NO NO YES NO NO 350 40 40 NO YES YES 120 YES NO NO NO NO NO NO NO 300 300 NO NO NO YES 100 YES 150 150 NO YES YES YES NO NO NO NO 100 100 YES NO NO NO -

Biomethanati on (TPD) or (YES/NO) 2008 2010 NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO YES NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO 20 ** NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO -

RDF/ WTE (TPD) or (YES/NO) 2008 2010 NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO 500 NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO 300* NO NO NO NO 275* 275* NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO -

LFG recovery 2008 NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO 2010 NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO -

Sanitary Landfill 2008 NO NO NO NO YES NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO 2010 NO NO NO NO NO NO YES NO NO NO YES YES NO NO YES NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO -

Earth Cover 2008 NO NO NO YES NO NO NO NO YES NO YES NO YES NO NO NO NO NO NO 2010 NO NO NO NO NO YES YES NO NO NO YES YES NO NO YES NO YES NO YES NO NO NO NO YES NO NO -

Alignment/ Compaction 2008 NO NO NO YES NO NO NO NO YES NO NO NO YES YES YES NO NO NO NO 2010 NO NO NO NO NO YES YES NO NO NO YES YES NO NO YES NO NO NO YES NO NO NO NO YES YES NO -

Page | 147

65 66 67
S.No.

Panaji Imphal Gandhinagar City

32 (54) 43 (48) 44 (43)

81 72 65

MSW Generation (TPD) 2001 15 13 13 12 16 (7) 3 2011 23 20 19 18 11 5

69 70 71 72 73 74

Daman Kohima Gangtok Itanagar Silvassa Kavaratti Count: 74 cities TOTAL (TPD)

NO NO NO Composting (TPD) or (YES/NO) 2008 2010 NO NO 50 NO NO NO 22 3,080 40 4,861

NO NO NO Biomethanati on (TPD) or (YES/NO) 2008 2010 NO NO NO NO NO NO 3 9

NO NO NO RDF/ WTE (TPD) or (YES/NO) 2008 2010 NO NO NO NO NO NO 1 500 7 3,930

NO NO NO

NO NO NO

NO NO NO

YES YES NO

LFG recovery 2008 NO NO NO NO NO NO 0 2010 3

Sanitary Landfill 2008 NO NO NO NO NO NO 1 2010 8

Earth Cover 2008 NO NO NO NO NO NO 15 2010 21

Alignment/ Compaction 2008 YES NO YES NO NO NO 25 2010 24

* Not in operation

Page | 148

APPENDIX 4, AIR EMISSIONS FROM ALL SOURCES IN MUMBAI

Emission Load for Mumbai City from All Sources


PM CO SO2 25.2 7.9 16.2 274.0 1,262.0 27.0 108.0 135.0 NOx 120.1 44.4 9.4 499.0 9,946.9 164.0 649.0 813.0 HC 10,287.4 1,991.9 0.1 25.4 368.1 1,173.0 4,649.0 5,822.0

a) Area Source
Bakeries 1,554.6 11,348.1 Crematoria 300.7 2,213.0 Open eat outs 281.6 167.8 Hotel restaurants 593.1 755.2 Domestic sector 564.9 19,723.7 Open burning 734.0 2,292.0 Landfill Open Burning 2,906.0 9,082.0 Total Open Burning 3,640.0 11,374.0 Construction Activity 2,288.9 Locomotive (Cen.+ Wes. Rly) 514.0 3,147.0 Aircraft 75.6 788.4 Marine vessels 1.8 3.3 Total (A) 9,815.3 49,520.5 B) Industrial Source Power plant 5,628.3 3,215.7 39 Industries 503.7 879.7 Stone crushers 1,394.3 Total (B) 7,526.3 4,095.4 C) Line Source 2 wheelers 70.1 3,303.2 3 wheelers 225.9 1,320.9 Car diesel 313.8 1,150.5 Car petrol 15.7 7,867.5 HMV 916.7 4,435.5 Taxies 2.6 778.6 Paved Road dust 3,163.0 Unpaved Road dust 4,761.4 Total (C ) 9,469.2 18,856.2 Total (A+B+C) 26,810.8 72,472.1 * All values expressed in TPY., -- Vehicle Fuel used CNG/LPG

1,449.0 77.0 19.7 3,266.0 24,473.3 28,510.2 52,983.5 2.7 363.7 87.2 13.1 126.7 13.0

19,708.0 985.5 17.9 32,144.2 28,944.5 8,435.2 37,379.7 540.5 3,943.5 1,063.3 313.7 6,875.0 467.1

32.3 1.5 18,528.6 1,266.6 116.8 1,383.4 1,221.2 435.8 496.6 273.5

229.7 56,479.2

9,169.2 78,693.1

6,837.7 26,749.7

This table was modified to get Table 11 and find the emissions from open burning of MSW. Emissions from Open Burning and Landfill Open Burning were combined to find emissions due to overall Open Burning of MSW. Emissions from Bakeries, Open eat outs, and Hotels and Page | 149

Restaurants were combined to calculate the emissions from Commercial Food Sector. Emissions from 2 wheelers, 3 wheelers, Taxies, Diesel Cards, Petrol Cars, and Heavy Motor Vehicles (HMV) were combined to calculate the overall emissions from Road Transportation.
APPENDIX 5, CALCULATION FOR SMALL SCALE BIOMETHANATION (IN KERALA STATE)

All Biogas units accounted in this calculation were those installed by Biotech Center for Development of Biogas Technology and Other Non-Conventional Energy Sources (Biotech). Biogas units were installed by some more companies, but those are not accounted due to lack of data and confusion about the number of units installed by them in urban and rural areas. Therefore, the original values of waste diverted from landfills, savings on collection and transportation to municipal authorities and GHG emissions avoided will be higher than those calculated in this appendix. Per capita waste generation in Thiruvananthapuram Per capita organic waste generation (72.96% of total MSW) = 0.262 kg/day = 0.191 kg/day

Assuming 4 persons/household, per capita organic waste generated by a single household = 0.765 kg/day Biogas units installed in Thiruvananthapuram Total organic waste diverted in Thiruvananthapuram = 10,000 Units = 0.765*10000 = 7650 kg/day = 7.65 TPD = 2792.25 TPY MSW generated in Thiruvananthapuram Total Organic Waste generated in Thiruvananthapuram Percentage of organic waste diverted by Biogas Units in Thiruvananthapuram Percentage of total MSW diverted by Biogas Units in Thiruvananthapuram = 308 TPD = 225 TPD = 3.4% = 2.45%

Per capita waste generation in Kochi Per capita organic waste generation (57.34% of total MSW)

= 0.765 kg/day = 0.439 kg/day

Page | 150

Assuming 4 persons/household, per capita organic waste generated by a single household = 1.755 kg/day Biogas Units installed in Kochi Total organic waste diverted by these units in Kochi = 10,000 Units = 17.55 TPD = 6406.5 TPY MSW generated in Kochi Total Organic Waste generated in Kochi Percentage of organic waste diverted by Biogas Units in Kochi Percentage of total MSW diverted by Biogas Units in Kochi = 1,366 TPD = 783 TPD = 2.24% = 1.3%

Overall tonnage of Waste diverted by small scale Biogas units from landfill, and transportation and collection = 25.2 TPD = 9198 TPY Overall percentage of waste diverted from landfill, and transportation and collection = 2.5% of Organic waste generated = 1.5% of total MSW generated

Overall savings on collection and transportation of MSW to the municipal authorities (Appendix 11) = 24,445 Rs/year * 9198 TPY = 224,845,110 Rs/year = USD 4.5 million/year Total green house gas emissions avoided by using small scale biogas units (Appendix 11) = 721.4 kg/year * 9198 TPY = 6,635 TPY of CO2 emissions

Page | 151

APPENDIX 6, PERCENTAGE OF RECYCLABLES RECOVERED AND EFFICIENCY OF SEPARATING RECYCLABLES BY WASTE PICKERS (WPS) FROM FORMALLY COLLECTED MSW IN PUNE; SOURCE: CHINTAN

MSW collected by formal system MSW burnt on streets or not collected Total MSW generated Therefore, percentage of MSW burnt or not collected

= 365,000 TPY = 17,885 TPY = 382,885 TPY = 17885/382885 = 4.671%

NEERI found out that 2% of wastes generated are burnt on streets, so 4.7% above falls close to expected range as it includes MSW not collected too. Moisture loss during MSW handling Percentage of weight change due to moisture loss MSW after moisture loss Assuming 20% recyclables in the formally collected MSW stream, Amount of Recyclables = 0.2 * 344560 = 68,912 TPY Recyclables recovered by WPs at MRFs Percentage of MSW recovered by WPs at MRFs = 2,190 TPY = 2190/344560 = 0.636 % of total MSW Percentage of recyclables recovered by WPs at MRFs = 2190/68912 = 3.2% of Recyclables MSW transported to disposal site = 344560 - 2190 = 342,370 TPY Additional retrieval of Recyclables by WPs at landfills Percentage of MSW recovered by WPs at landfills = 12,045 TPY = 12045/344560 = 3.5% of total MSW Percentage of recyclables recovered by WPs at landfills = 12045/68912 = 17.48 % of recyclables Page | 152 = 20,440 TPY = 5.6% = 344,560 TPY

MSW left at disposal site

= 342,370 - 12,045 = 330,325 TPY

Percentage of MSW left at landfill after all possible informal recycling

= 330325/344560

= 95.87 % of MSW collected formally (excluding loss in moisture) (It has to be noted that by integrating the informal recycling sector into the waste management system has the potential of increasing recyclables recovery, thus decreasing amount of MSW landfilled) Percentage of recyclables recovered from formally collected recyclables = (2190+12045)/68912 = 20.65 % of recyclables in MSW stream collected formally A recycling percentage of 21% is as good as recycling rates in many OECD nations. It is greater than the recycling rates in many US states. Recycling rates in OECD countries are at their present high after considerable public awareness programs and centralized infrastructure intensive waste management systems. Percentage of WPs who recover recyclables from formally collected MSW is only 20%. Rest of the WP population recovers recyclables from streets and garbage bins. Recyclables recovered in this manner are not accounted for, by formal waste management systems. This results in an underestimation of MSW generated in a city when measured at the dump. Calculating the recyclables recovery efficiency from formally collected MSW at MRFs and landfills Total WPs in Pune Population of WPs working at MRFs and landfills = 7,000 = 0.2*7000 = 1,400 MSW collected by 1,400 WPs = 12045 + 2190 = 14,235 TPY Assuming 300 effective working days for the overall WP population, considering seasonal changes in populations, Recyclables recovered by one WP = (14235*1000)/(1400*300) = 34 kg/person/day at MRFs and landfills combined

Page | 153

APPENDIX 7, LANDFILL MINING PROJECTS AROUND THE WORLD, SOURCE: (64)

Year

Country

Location Compost Recycling WTE Recovery

Motive Avoidance of Ground Water Contamination

Land reclamation

Demonstration Project YES

1990 USA 1991 USA 1992 USA 1992 USA 1993 USA 1993 USA 1994 USA 1994 Canada 1994 1994 1994 1998 2001 2001

Germany Sardinia Sweden Filborna Sweden Gladsax Netherlands Arnhem Netherlands Heiloo Total Count

Edinburg, Texas Lancaster County Bethlehem Thomson, Connecticut Nashville, Tennessee Newbury, Massachusetts Hague, New York McDougal, Ontario Berghot

YES

YES YES YES YES

YES

YES YES YES YES YES YES YES YES YES YES YES YES YES 8

2 Page | 154

APPENDIX 8, COMPOSTING PLANTS IN OPERATION IN INDIA, SOURCE: CPCB

S. No. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31

Composting Plants in Operation City/District State Hyderabad (Dundigal) Vijayawada Kamrup Tejpur Patna Bhilla Chirmiri Dhamtari Dury Jagdalpur Korba Raigarh Raipur Rajnandgaon Delhi Ahmadabad Junagarh Surat Vadodara Ambala Sirsa Bhuntar Bilaspur Kangra Kullu Mandi Nagrota Nahan Shimla Sirmour Solan Andhra Pradesh Andhra Pradesh Assam Assam Bihar Chhattisgarh Chhattisgarh Chhattisgarh Chhattisgarh Chhattisgarh Chhattisgarh Chhattisgarh Chhattisgarh Chhattisgarh Delhi Gujarat Gujarat Gujarat Gujarat Haryana Haryana Himachal Pradesh Himachal Pradesh Himachal Pradesh Himachal Pradesh Himachal Pradesh Himachal Pradesh Himachal Pradesh Himachal Pradesh Himachal Pradesh Himachal Pradesh

New Composting Plants Proposed City/District State Port Blair Itanagar Naharlagun Dharamsala Hamirpur Nirmalnagar Ujjain Ambad Jalna Murud-Jaljira Navapur Panvel Sonepat Wardha Yavatmal Aizwal Kohima Karaikal Pondicherry Kartarpur Mandi Gobindgarh Agartala Ghaziabad Noida Barrackpore Bhadreshwar Dum Dum Garulia Kachrapara Kalna Kalyani Andaman & Nicobar Islands Arunachal Pradesh Arunachal Pradesh Himachal Pradesh Himachal Pradesh Karnataka Madhya Pradesh Maharashtra Maharashtra Maharashtra Maharashtra Maharashtra Maharashtra Maharashtra Maharashtra Mizoram Nagaland Pondicherry Pondicherry Punjab Punjab Tripura Uttar Pradesh Uttar Pradesh West Bengal West Bengal West Bengal West Bengal West Bengal West Bengal West Bengal

Page | 155

S. No. 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66

Composting Plants in Operation City/District State Una Bengaluru Mangalore Kochi Bhopal Gwalior Indore Achalpur Akola Aurangabad Barshi Beed Bhiwandi- Nizampur Chandrapur Dhule Kolhapur Latur Malegaon Miraj-kuped Mumbai Nagpur Parbhani Pimpri- Chinchwad Pune Sangli Satara Shillong Barbil Berhampur Jatni Kotpad Paradeep Puri Rayagada Karaikal Himachal Pradesh Karnataka Karnataka Kerala Madhya Pradesh Madhya Pradesh Madhya Pradesh Maharashtra Maharashtra Maharashtra Maharashtra Maharashtra Maharashtra Maharashtra Maharashtra Maharashtra Maharashtra Maharashtra Maharashtra Maharashtra Maharashtra Maharashtra Maharashtra Maharashtra Maharashtra Maharashtra Meghalaya Orissa Orissa Orissa Orissa Orissa Orissa Orissa Pondicherry

New Composting Plants Proposed City/District State Panihati Rishtra Serampore Siliguri West Bengal West Bengal West Bengal West Bengal

Page | 156

S. No. 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79

Composting Plants in Operation City/District State Pondicherry Adampur Jalandhar Jodhpur Chennai Coimbatore Namakkal Tiruppur Bareilly Hindon Kanpur Lucknow Kolkata Pondicherry Punjab Punjab Rajasthan Tamil Nadu Tamil Nadu Tamil Nadu Tamil Nadu Uttar Pradesh Uttar Pradesh Uttar Pradesh Uttar Pradesh West Bengal

Page | 157

APPENDIX 9, AREA OCCUPIED BY KNOWN LANDFILLS IN INDIA AND PROPOSALS FOR NEW LANDFILLS; SOURCE: CPCB

S.No.

Name of city

No. of landfill sites 2 2 1 3 1 1 3 1 1 1 2 1 1 1 3 1 1 1 1 1 1 2 1 1 1 1 1 2 1

Area of landfill (ha) 465.5 292 200 140 121.5 84 66.4 60.7 59.5 48.6 40.7 40.5 40.4 34.4 31.4 30.4 27 24.7 18 15 14.6 14.2 13.2 12.15 8.1 6.8 4.5 4.1 2.8

1 Chennai 2 Coimbatore 3 Surat 4 Greater Mumbai 5 Greater Hyderabad 6 Ahmadabad 7 Delhi 8 Jabalpur 9 Indore 10 Madurai 11 Greater Bengaluru 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29

Greater Visakhapatnam Ludhiana Nashik Jaipur Srinagar Kanpur Kolkata Chandigarh Ranchi Raipur Meerut Guwahati Thiruvananthpuram Vadodara Agartala Dehradun Jamshedpur Gangtok

Life of landfill (Years) 24/17 30 35 25 15 35 14 -

New site proposed (YES/NO) No No No No No Yes No Yes No No No No No No No No No Yes No No Yes No No No Yes Yes Yes No No Page | 158

S.No.

Name of city

No. of landfill sites 3 1 1 1 1 1 2 1 1 1 3 2 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 4 1 1

Area of landfill (ha) 2.4 2 2 1.5 1.4 1.2 1.2 0.6 0.2 0.2

30 Faridabad 31 Asansol 32 Varanasi 33 Agra 34 Lucknow 35 Panjim 36 Rajkot 37 Simla 38 Kavaratti 39 Port Blair 40 Dhanbad 41 Allahabad 42 Daman 43 Aizwal 44 Bhopal 45 Imphal 46 Itanagar 47 Kochi 48 Kohima 49 Nagpur 50 Pune 51 Shillong 52 Silvassa 53 Vijayawada 54 Bhubaneshwar 55 Amritsar 56 Jammu 57 Gandhinagar 58 Patna 59 Pondicherry

Life of landfill (Years) 7 30 3 30 6 10 -

New site proposed (YES/NO) No No Yes No Yes No Yes No No Yes No No No No No No No No No No No No No No Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes

TOTAL

76

1,934

Page | 159

APPENDIX 10, INCIDENCE OF HEALTH RISK AND DISEASES IN WASTE PICKERS AND MUNICIPAL WORKERS; SOURCE: CPCB

Health assessment studies on 732 individuals were conducted in Kolkata. The studies included clinical examination of 376 conservancy workers (MSW Staff), 151 waste pickers (WPs) and 205 controls (Control Population). These results were used to calculate the incidence of health problems in WPs (Figure 26). The results of testing these individuals for 16 different health problems are as follows:
Health problems Tested Control Population Tested Positive 8 2 6 21 12 23 13 7 8 11 32 2 2 43 43 17 Waste Pickers Tested Positive 68 16 34 117 65 96 53 26 23 28 80 5 4 84 82 32 MSW Staff Tested Positive 82 25 44 162 85 167 64 34 32 36 89 10 5 71 93 45 Incidence of Incidence Incidence Health of Health of Health Problems in Problems Problems Control in WPs in MSW Population (%) (%) Staff (%) 4 45 22 1 11 7 3 10 6 11 6 3 4 5 16 1 1 21 21 8 23 77 43 64 35 17 15 19 53 3 3 56 54 21 12 43 23 44 17 9 9 10 24 3 1 19 25 12 Increase in Incidence in WPs Compared to Control Population 11.5 10.9 7.7 7.6 7.4 5.7 5.5 5.0 3.9 3.5 3.4 3.4 2.7 2.7 2.6 2.6 Increase in Incidence in MSW Staff Compared to Control Population 5.6 6.8 4.0 4.2 3.9 4.0 2.7 2.6 2.2 1.8 1.5 2.7 1.4 0.9 1.2 1.4

Chromosome break Elevated mucus production Covert lung hemorrhage Cardiovascular risk High PM10 exposure Altered immunity Infection, Inflammation Other infections High pollution load Allergy, asthma Lung infection Bacterial infection Obstruction in airways Breathing problem Nose & throat infections Anemia

Page | 160

APPENDIX 11, COST AND CARBON DIOXIDE EMISSIONS OF TRANSPORTING ON TON OF MSW IN INDIA; SOURCES: (9), USEPA, WWW.MYPETROLPRICE.COM

Capacity of each truck used for MSW transportation Mileage of each truck Diesel Price Therefore, cost per km

= 12 tons = 4.5 km/litre = 45 Rs/litre = 10 Rs/km

Conservative assumption, Distance travelled to landfill/other disposal facilities = 20 km Number of trips by each truck Total Distance travelled by each truck Cost of fuel Total MSW handled by each truck Maintenance costs per truck =3 = 120 km = 1200 Rs = 36 TPD = 150,000 Rs/year = 411 Rs/day/truck No. of Drivers required for 3 trips Salary of each Driver =3 = 8000 Rs/month = 266.67 Rs/day/driver Total Salary of Drivers Therefore, cost of transporting 36 TPD of MSW Cost of transporting 1 ton = 800 Rs/day/truck = 2411 Rs/day = 67.0 Rs/day = 24,444.8611 Rs/year Savings on avoiding the transportation of one Ton of MSW to landfill = 24,445 Rs/year (USD 500) per ton of MSW transportation

Page | 161

Calculating Carbon Dioxide Emissions from Transporting MSW Carbon Dioxide Emissions from Diesel fuel = 10.1 kg/gallon = 2.7 kg/liter Distance travelled by each truck Mileage Therefore, Diesel consumption CO2 Emissions from transporting 36 TPD of MSW CO2 Emissions for transporting 1 ton of MSW = 120 km/day = 4.5 km/liter = 26.67 liters/day = 71.2 kg/day = 2.0 kg/day = 721.3854 kg/year CO2 Emissions avoided by avoiding the transport of 1 ton of MSW = 721.4 kg/year per ton of MSW transportation

Page | 162

APPENDIX 12, HEAVY METALS CONCENTRATION IN MIXED WASTE COMPOST; SOURCE: IISS

Concentrations of all heavy metals except Cadmium are expressed in mg/kg dry mass of compost. Cadmium concentration is expressed in mg/100 kg dry mass of compost.
Heavy Metals in Mixed Waste Composts Concentration Lowest (mg/kg) Highest (mg/kg) 946 865 8 647 190 401 252 198 0.94 133 25 69 Median (mg/kg) Quality Control standard (mg/kg) 1000 300 5 100 50 50

Zinc 82 Copper 25 Cadmium* 0 Lead 11 Nickel 9 Chromium 14 *Cadmium concentration units are mg/100 kg

Page | 163

APPENDIX 13, POTENTIAL AGRICULTURAL SOILS

HAZARD

OF

INTRODUCING

HEAVY

METALS

INTO

If all MSW generated in India from 2011-2021 is treated in MBT facilities and the compost was used for agriculture, it would introduce 73,000 tons of heavy metals into agricultural soils.
Year Zinc 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 1,818.4 1,894.2 1,973.1 2,055.3 2,141.0 2,230.2 2,323.1 2,420.0 2,520.8 2,625.8 2,735.3 24,737 Copper 1,625.1 1,692.9 1,763.4 1,836.9 1,913.4 1,993.2 2,076.2 2,162.8 2,252.9 2,346.8 2,444.6 22,108 10.1 10.5 11.0 11.4 11.9 12.4 12.9 13.4 14.0 14.6 15.2 137 Heavy Metals Cadmium Lead 1,106.9 1,153.0 1,201.0 1,251.1 1,303.2 1,357.5 1,414.1 1,473.0 1,534.4 1,598.3 1,664.9 15,057 Nickel 180.1 187.6 195.4 203.5 212.0 220.9 230.1 239.7 249.6 260.0 270.9 2,450 Chromium 623.7 649.7 676.8 705.0 734.3 764.9 796.8 830.0 864.6 900.7 938.2 8,485

Total
5,364 5,588 5,821 6,063 6,316 6,579 6,853 7,139 7,436 7,746 8,069 72,975

Total

Page | 164

APPENDIX 14, DIOXINS/FURANS EMISSIONS FROM OPEN BURNING OF MSW IN MUMBAI, SOURCES: (5), (65)

Data for the amount of MSW burnt in Mumbai is obtained from CPCB and NEERI study (5). Wards and landfills are listed accordingly. The Dioxins/Furans emissions factor assumed is 35,196 ng/kg of MSW openly-burnt from the World Bank document on SWM Holistic Decision Modeling (65).
Ward/Landfill A B C D E F/S F/N G/S G/N H/E H/W K/E K/W P/S P/N R/S R/C R/N L M/E M/W N S T GORAI (R/S) DEONAR (M/E) MULUND (T) TOTAL MSW Openly Burnt (TPD) 8.01 2.646 5.176 10.44 10.08 5.85 6.3 7.47 10.62 5.076 6.48 6.75 8.236 4.05 6.66 3.214 6.03 3.016 8.352 5.626 5.986 4.59 5.22 3.61 119 410 63 741 Dioxins/Furans (g/day) 0.282 0.093 0.182 0.367 0.355 0.206 0.222 0.263 0.374 0.179 0.228 0.238 0.290 0.143 0.234 0.113 0.212 0.106 0.294 0.198 0.211 0.162 0.184 0.127 4.188 14.430 2.217 26.10 MSW Openly Burnt (TPY) 2923.65 965.79 1889.24 3810.6 3679.2 2135.25 2299.5 2726.55 3876.3 1852.74 2365.2 2463.75 3006.14 1478.25 2430.9 1173.11 2200.95 1100.84 3048.48 2053.49 2184.89 1675.35 1905.3 1317.65 43435 149650 22995 270,643 Dioxins/Furans (g/year) 102.9007854 33.99194484 66.49369104 134.1178776 129.4931232 75.152259 80.933202 95.9636538 136.4302548 65.20903704 83.2455792 86.714145 105.8041034 52.028487 85.5579564 41.28877956 77.4646362 38.74516464 107.2943021 72.27463404 76.89938844 58.9656186 67.0589388 46.3760094 1528.73826 5267.0814 809.33202 9,525.6

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APPENDIX 15, MATERIAL AND ENERGY RESOURCE WASTAGE IN THE NEXT DECADE DUE TO CURRENT LANDFILLING PRACTICES IN INDIA State/UT Maharashtra West Bengal Uttar Pradesh Tamil Nadu Delhi Andhra Pradesh Karnataka Gujarat Rajasthan Madhya Pradesh Punjab Kerala Bihar Haryana Jharkhand Chhattisgarh Orissa Jammu & Kashmir Chandigarh Assam Uttarakhand Pondicherry Meghalaya Tripura Andaman & Nicobar Mizoram Goa Manipur Nagaland Himachal Pradesh Daman & Diu Sikkim Arunachal Pradesh Dadra & Nagar Haveli Lakshadweep TOTAL MSW Generated (Tons) 8,107,366 5,687,953 4,741,415 4,297,001 4,218,548 4,156,349 2,850,532 2,584,597 1,812,892 1,641,615 1,168,347 1,075,727 1,010,183 956,718 672,159 588,262 493,128 455,336 177,549 169,241 168,583 163,884 49,962 41,723 41,717 31,331 30,935 26,102 23,519 22,496 8,634 7,091 6,537 4,026 1,667 No. of Oil Barrel eq. landfilled 9,153,817 7,188,941 6,152,425 4,851,633 5,473,957 4,692,826 3,218,462 2,918,202 2,352,396 1,853,505 1,516,039 1,214,576 1,276,759 1,241,430 849,534 763,324 623,259 590,840 230,386 213,902 218,752 185,038 63,146 52,734 65,380 39,599 34,928 32,990 29,726 29,191 9,749 8,962 8,262 4,546 2,612 57,161,825 Compost landfilled (Tons) 1,752,002 1,115,408 929,791 859,830 827,257 831,685 570,391 558,531 355,508 354,753 229,113 215,253 198,097 187,612 131,810 115,358 96,702 89,291 34,817 33,188 33,059 32,793 9,797 8,182 9,349 6,144 6,685 5,119 4,612 4,412 1,866 1,390 1,282 870 373 9,612,334 Recyclables landfilled (Tons) 1,093,368 721,961 677,046 647,674 602,383 626,474 429,652 348,561 258,870 221,390 166,833 162,141 128,220 136,614 85,316 84,000 62,592 65,019 25,353 21,481 24,072 24,702 6,342 5,296 8,935 3,977 4,172 3,313 2,985 3,212 1,164 900 830 543 357 6,655,749

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ANNEXURE I, MOU BETWEEN EEC AND NEERI

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ANNEXURE II, GLOBAL WTERT CHARTER

CHARTER OF THE GLOBAL WTERT COUNCIL


Introduction For nearly two decades, the Earth Engineering Center (EEC) of Columbia University has conducted research on the generation and disposition of used materials and products in the U.S. and globally. Economic development has resulted in the annual generation of billions of tons of used materials which represent a considerable resource but, when not managed properly, constitute a major environmental problem both in developed and developing nations. The goal of EEC is to identify and help develop the most suitable means for managing various solid wastes research, and disseminate this information by means of publications, the web, and technical meetings. EEC is also collaborating with BIOCYCLE journal in carrying out a bi-annual survey of generation and disposition of MSW in the U.S. that is now being used by U.S. EPA in computing greenhouse emissions from waste management. This research has engaged many M.S. and Ph.D. students on all aspects of waste management. Since 2000, EEC has produced thirty M.S. and Ph.D. theses and published nearly one hundred technical papers. In 2002, EEC co-founded, with the U.S. Energy Recovery Council (ERC; www.wte.org), the Waste-to-Energy Research and Technology Council (WTERT), which is by now the foremost research organization on the recovery of energy and metals from solid wastes in the U.S. In the course of its studies, EEC established that one billion tons of MSW are landfilled each year, landfilling will continue to be used in the foreseeable future, and nearly 80% of the worlds landfills are not equipped to capture landfill gas (LFG) and protect surface and ground waters from contamination. Therefore, in 2008 EEC proposed the expanded Hierarchy of Waste Management that differentiates between traditional and sanitary landfills. In recent years, sister organizations to the WTERT in the U.S. have been created in several other nations such as Brazil, Canada, China, France, Greece, Japan and India. In the interest of the common goal of these organizations, of advancing sustainable waste management, it is necessary to establish a WTERT Charter that is agreed upon by the existing members of the global WTERT Council and can be then used to explain the operations of the Council to other nations that wish to become members and also to prospective industrial and government sponsors.

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The Name of the WTERT Council The principal tool for disseminating information by the U.S. and other existing members of WTERT has been the internet. The web addresses used (www.wtert.org, www.wtert.eu, www.wtert.gr, etc.) all include the acronym WTERT and this has the advantage that when one types WTERT in Google or other search engine, automatically one links to WTERT organizations in different countries. Thus WTERT has become a valuable brand name and can be very helpful to people seeking information on waste management in a particular country (e.g. Greece) by using the acronym WTERT and then the name of the country or letters representing it (e.g. gr). It is therefore necessary for member nations to register and use the wtert web addr ess (e.g. www.wtert.gr) as well as whatever other name and address they wish. For example, the sister organization in Greece chose the name SYNERGIA so one can find their web either by going to www.wtert.gr or by using the SYNERGIA address. Therefore, each national member should choose whatever word or words are most suitable to express the mission of their organization in their national language; and also use the second name WTERT-Greece, WTERT-France, etc. to express the fact that they are also a member of the global WTERT Council. Mission of WTERT Council The mission of the global WTERT Council is to identify the best available technologies for the treatment of various waste materials, conduct additional academic research as required, and disseminate this information by means of publications, the WTERT web pages, and periodic meetings. In particular, WTERT strives to increase the global recovery of materials and energy from used solids, by means of recycling, composting, waste-to-energy, and sanitary landfilling with LFG utilization. The guiding principle is that responsible management of wastes must be based on science and best available technology at a particular location and not what seems to be inexpensive now but can be very costly in the future. Figure 1 shows the general rule of the accepted hierarchy of waste management. However, WTERT understands that for practical or economic reasons it may be not be possible to follow this hierarchy at all times and at all locations. For example, waste-to-energy requires a much larger initial investment than a landfill and therefore may not be attainable at a certain stage of economic development of a community; in such a case, a sanitary landfill with LFG recovery would be the next preferable option. As another example, an EEC study has shown that use of yard wastes as Alternative Daily Cover in sanitary landfills, in place of soil, is environmentally advantageous to windrow composting of the yard wastes. Page | 175

Figure 1: The hierarchy of waste management

Scope of Operations of WTERT Council The WTERT Council consists of designated representatives of each national WTERT organization. These representatives will form the governing board of the Council. The Chair of the governing board of the Council will be elected by majority vote of all members for a tenure period of two years. The Council will review and vote on the WTERT Charter and subsequent actions affecting the operations and Charter of the Council. Most communications will be by email or telephone conference. However, occasional meetings of the Council will be called, preferably to be held in conjunction with an international meeting on waste management. The WTERT Council realizes that waste management solutions vary from region to region. It is hoped that through the new and powerful tool of the internet, we can collectively create a global platform for sharing of experience, expertise and information that will advance the goals of sustainable waste management world-wide. The Council may also provide start up funding for new WTERT organizations. Scope of Operations of Each National WTERT Organization The objectives of each WTERT national organization are: 1. To develop and maintain a WTERT web page that describes the mission and scope of the organization and links as many as possible academic and industrial research groups Page | 176

working on various aspects of waste management, within the nation. Preferably, this web page will be hosted at a major university that is conducting research on resource recovery from wastes. Most of the material in this web page will be in the national language so as to inform the general public and policymakers as well as academia and industry. However, the front web page should also provide for English language translation of part of the content, as discussed in (2) below. 2. To identify the most suitable technologies for the treatment of various waste materials in the nation, encourage additional academic research as required, disseminate this information within the nation, and provide an English language window for the outside world to learn about problems and opportunities for advancing waste management in their respective nation. 3. Once the organization platform described in (a) and (b) has been created, the national WTERT can seek sponsorship and funding by industry and government organizations concerned with advancing waste management in the nation. This model of operation has been successful with some of the existing WTERT national members who are willing to advise and assist new members. Current WTERT national members and contact information (in chronological order of joining WTERT Council) 1. WTERT-US (www.WTERT.org) Earth Engineering Center, Columbia University 500 West 120th St., New York, NY 10027, U.S.A. Prof. N.J. Themelis <[email protected]> Prof. M.J. Castaldi <[email protected]> 2. WTERT-Canada (www.WTERT.ca) Canadian EfW Coalition (CEFWC) 10 Rambert Crescent Toronto, Ontario M6S 1E6, Canada Mr. John Foden <[email protected]> 3. WTERT-Greece (www.WTERT.gr)

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Name: SYNERGIA 19 km Peania-Markopoulo Ave. Peania 19002, Attica, Greece Dr. Efstratios Kalogirou <[email protected]> 4. WTERT-China (www.WTERT.cn) Name: C-WTERT Waste-to-Energy Department Chongqing University of Science and Technology (CQUST) Songtao Kong <[email protected]> 5. WTERT-Germany (www.WTERT.eu} Name: WtERT Technical University of Munich, Munich Prof. Martin Faulstich <[email protected]> Prof. Peter Quicker (RWTH, Aachen, Germany) <[email protected]> 6. WTERT-Japan (www.WTERT.jp) Tokyo Institute of Technology Suzukakedai Campus 4259 G5-8 Nagatsuta-cho, Midori-ku Yokohama, Kanagawa, 226-8503, Japan Prof. Kunio Yoshikawa <[email protected]> 7. WTERT-Brazil (www.WTERT.br) Name: CONGENERES University of Brazil, Rio de Janeiro (UFRJ) Dr. Sergio Guerreiro Ribeiro <[email protected]>

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8. WTERT-France (www.WTERT.fr) Name: Pending Ecole des Mines d'Albi-Carmaux Campus Jarlard - Route de Teillet, ALBI CT Cedex, France Prof. Ange Nzihou <[email protected]> 9. WTERT-U.K. (www.WTERT.uk) Name: Pending Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering Imperial College, London, U.K. Dr. Chris Cheeseman <[email protected]> 10. WTERT-Italy (www.WTERT.it) Name: Materials & Energy from Waste (MEFW) Department of Energy - School of Industrial Engineering - Politecnico di Milano Campus Piacenza, Piacenza, Italy Prof. Stefano Consonni < [email protected] > Prof. Mario Grosso < [email protected]> 11. WTERT-India (Website address pending) National Environmental Engineering Research Institute (NEERI) Dr. Sunil Kumar <[email protected]> Ranjith Annepu <[email protected]>

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ANNEXURE III, PRESS RELEASE REGARDING THE FORMATION OF WTERT-INDIA

Source: NEERI News, NEERI and Columbia University signed an MOU to form WTERT-India Date: August 04, 2011

Waste-to-Energy Research and Technology Council, India (WTERT, India)


The Earth Engineering Center (EEC) at Columbia University in the City of New York decided to team up with the National Environmental Engineering Research Institute (NEERI) to set-up Waste-to-Energy Research and Technology (WTERT) Council in India. This association between the above two prime research organizations in the world is established to address the rising interest, increasing investments, to create awareness and, to funnel important decisions related to municipal solid waste management (MSWM) in India in the right direction. WTERTIndia would also be added to the WTERTs global charter where it would function as Indias window to the world on the entire spectrum of solid waste management issues. For nearly two decades, the Earth Engineering Center (EEC) of Columbia University has conducted research on the generation and disposition of used materials and products in the U.S. and globally. This research has engaged many researchers on all aspects of waste management. Since 2000, EEC has produced thirty M.S. and Ph.D. theses and published nearly one hundred technical papers. In 2002, EEC co-founded, with the U.S. Energy Recovery Council (ERC; www.wte.org), the Waste-to-Energy Research and Technology Council (WTERT), which is by now the foremost research organization on the recovery of energy and metals from solid wastes in the U.S. The National Environmental Engineering Research Institute (NEERI) headquartered at Nagpur and with five other branches in Chennai, Delhi, Hyderabad, Kolkata and Mumbai is one of the prime research institutes in India. It is a forerunner in research on solid waste management with dedicated researchers. Research conducted by NEERI in 2005 on MSWM in fifty nine cities is one of the comprehensive studies on this issue. The other important studies on SWM include Indias Initial National Communication to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change. The work related to Landfill Gas use as LNG in transport sector as well as new LFG model development is under progress with Texas Transportation Institute, US. The researchers engaged in solid waste management at NEERI are recognized internationally. WTERT, India will be the latest addition to the global WTERT Council which is already operating in the U.S., Canada, Greece, China, Germany, Japan, Brazil, France, U.K. and Italy. The mission of Page | 180

this council is to identify the best available technologies for the treatment of various waste materials, conduct additional academic research as required, and disseminate this information by means of publications, the WTERT web pages, and periodic meetings. In particular, WTERT strives to increase the global recovery of materials and energy from used solids, by means of recycling, composting, waste-to-energy, and, sanitary landfilling with LFG utilization. The guiding principle is that responsible management of wastes must be based on science and best available technology at a particular location and not on ideology and economics that exclude environmental costs and seem to be inexpensive now but can be very costly in the future. WTERT, India is set-up with the understanding that solutions vary from region to region and is committed to researching locally available technologies.

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Improper solid waste management is an everyday nuisance to urban Indians


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