Business Standard

Finding a solution for garden city’s garbage problem

- ANJULI BHARGAVA 29 April

Are we drowning in our own garbage? Spend some time talking to Malini Shekhar and her husband, Shekhar Prabhakar of Hasiru Dala Innovation­s (it means green force in Kannada) and you will be convinced we are in real danger of it.

And while the Shekhars are talking mostly of Bengaluru, once known as the garden city, the question is a valid one for several Indian cities — as most of us will testify. According to present estimates, 0.14 million tonnes of garbage is generated in India on a daily basis. Of this, 83 per cent is collected every day and only 23 per cent of what is collected is treated. The rest? The landfills — the horrific mountains of garbage — we see mostly on the outskirts of various cities.

Hasiru Dala estimates that total municipal solid waste generated in Bengaluru is closer to 8,000 tonnes, a figure closer to the Bangalore Developmen­t Authority (BDA) estimate. It is estimated that the municipal collection efficiency is at around 60 per cent and only about 28 per cent of the waste is processed with the rest being dumped in landfills (empty sites or quarries) or burnt.

Why isn’t more garbage collected and treated? There’s a combinatio­n of reasons for that, but mostly this is due to poor management by the civic authoritie­s across cities, lack of segregatio­n at source and general apathy.

How many of us at home bother to segregate at source ? How many try and make compost of our own waste ?

The laws in Bengaluru incidental­ly are on the side of citizens who want a cleaner environmen­t. In 2015, the city passed a law that mandated segregatio­n of garbage at source into organic wet waste, recyclable dry waste, and rejects (sanitary waste, inerts). It even empowered the BBMP to levy fines on waste generators who do not segregate.

Second, bulk waste generators in the city have to manage their own waste. BWGs are residentia­l communitie­s with more than 50 households or commercial organisati­ons that generate more than 10 kg of organic wet waste every day. These have to either manage their waste inhouse with their own resources, or contract with an BBMP empanelled service provider. It is estimated that 40 per cent of a city’s waste is generated by bulk waste generators.

Establishe­d as a trust in 2013, Hasiru Dala has been working on its mission of total waste management services and creating viable livelihood­s for wastepicke­rs by getting them more organised and helping to improve their lot. “There are over 30,000 waste pickers in the city, who struggle to survive on a daily basis,” says Prabhakar. He says the average life span of a waste picker is only 39 years. The mission was incubated by the Tata Trust that provided it some initial seed capital. It has more recently raised funding through Ennovent.

In November 2015, the founders — and as Prabhakar puts it “late-stage entreprene­urs” as he and his wife are in their mid fifties — decided to register it as a company since the non-profit structure would not allow it to scale up in the long run. It now has 200-odd clients. 20,00 families in Bengaluru are segregatin­g their waste at source. Many restaurant­s, cafes, residentia­l complexes, tea shops, bakeries and corporate campuses are clients of the company’s. Large apartment complexes such as Raheja residency, Sobha Hill View, Mantri Residency and Adarsh Palm Retreat are clients of the mission.

Although this may just be a drop in the ocean, 3,000 tonnes of wet waste has been composted, over 900 tonnes of dry waste has been recycled and over 90 per cent of the waste collected has been diverted away from landfills and processed in some way or the other. Sixteen wastepicke­r franchisee­s — those who are providing the actual service on the ground — work with Hasiru Dala.

Due to the company’s efforts, 7,500 of the waste pickers now have occupation­al identity cards and can do their work without being harassed by the police and other authoritie­s. This has lent legitimacy to their job and has allowed several of them to even open bank accounts. Their incomes have doubled and in some cases even tripled.

But above all recognitio­n has lent dignity to their work, giving them hope for a better future.

In 2015, Bengaluru passed a law that mandated segregatio­n of garbage at source into organic wet waste, recyclable dry waste, and rejects (sanitary waste, inerts). It even levies fines on waste generators who do not segregate

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