Abstract:
Solid waste management is one of the fundamental and essential services
provided by municipal authorities in the country to keep urban centres clean.
Solid waste management has always been a serious problem for cities
throughout the world” As a by-product of human activities, solid waste tends to
increase with rapid urbanization, improved living standards and changing
consumption patterns. “India is the second largest nation in the world, with a
population of 1.21 billion, accounting for nearly 18% of world’s 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.” (annepu, 2012). Management of
increasing amounts of solid waste is of serious concern and has become a major
task in many cities in developing countries. Due to rapid increase in population
over the last few decades, uncontrolled urbanisation, rising standard of living, the
generation rate of solid waste in Indian cities and towns have also accelerated.
Solid waste can be a valuable resource if properly used, otherwise can conclude
into unfavourable impacts on environment and serious consequences on the
health of public, arising from contamination of land and soil, water, air and spread
of diseases through waste. Solid waste generally consist of household waste,
construction and demolition waste, industrial and waste from streets.
The study is conducted with an aim to examine the existing problem faced in
Peri-urban areas related to solid waste management and suggest various new
strategies for solid waste management. Identifying the main issues and problems
to its effectiveness, inefficiency and to gain suggestions and recommendation to
improve the management structure and practices. For this study the objectives
are:
1. To study and understand what peri-urban areas are and delineate spatially
the peri-urban areas of Bhopal city.
i. Understanding of characteristics and formulation of PUA
through various document study.
ii. Identification of areas similar to the Peri-urban
characteristics.
iii. Delineation of the area based on the parameters and the
characteristics.
2. To study the SWM of peri-urban areas and identify its issues.
i. To understand the legal frame work for SWM in India.
ii. To study the type of waste generated and composition
iii. Identify gaps and issues in the existing MSW system
3. To suggest different practices for better management of SW and land
requirement for safe disposal.
i. To study the importance of service level benchmarking and
its parameters.
ii. Comparison with the best practices of MSW
iii. Implementation on the identified wards of the study areas
A case study of Bhopal planning area is taken to know the current scenario of
development in the planning area. To which part the city is growing and are
creating Peri-urban belts around it. The study represents firstly the identification
of Peri-urban areas according to different indicators given in the literature study
and based on the identification of the areas, the characteristic of waste
generation, quantification, current practices adopted and institutional framework.
The Peri-urban areas often close to the Municipal limits but are very poorly
treated by municipalities. Peri-urban areas suffer from a lack of infrastructural,
technical and financial resources to tackle the problems of waste management.
The main challenge is to provide various types of waste segregating and
composting recycling plan at various levels like village as well as household level
for the beneficial of the environment and for the people.
A comprehensive literature review is done to understand the terminologies,
concepts, theories and standards related to solid waste management. The
literature represents various terms and definition related to Peri-urban areas and
their formation and how they are delineated spatially. Followed by ways of
managing waste processes, approaches etc. Best practices adopted by cities,
peri-urban areas and villages for comparisons and learnings.
Field visits were conducted to collect primary and secondary data to understand
the SWM of the areas including visual surveys, interviews and interactions with
people, workers and Sarpanch. The surveys implied existing issues of solid
waste management, finding the gaps in several heads. The study revealed that
there is no segregation followed at the source, no door to door collection of
waste, the collection efficiency is only 22% of the surveyed population only to
some specific colonies in the study areas by the private waste collectors. Present
practice of SWM are very weak. Local authorities or panchayat don’t have proper
resource to tackle this issues immerging fastly. Institutional framework is missing,
lack of awareness and community participation is been observed. Analysis is
been done on the basis of primary and secondary survey, population projection
and future waste estimations has been done. Comparison with the service level
benchmarking parameter to the current situation and gap identification analysis is
done.
Suitable solution, recommendations, suggestions and proposals such as
inclusion of informal sector for door-to-door collection, introduction of 3R principal
(reuse, reduce, recycle), introduction to decentralized approach of solid waste
management, improvement in capacity building to overcome the identified issues.
Land requirement calculation for composting and biomethanisation is proposed
according to the future projected population. The study and process adopted for
preparation of waste management plan will be helpful for Bhopal Peri-urban
areas and for the other authorities with peri-urban area.