Examine India’s solid waste management system’s inadequacies.
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India’s solid waste management system faces significant inadequacies that hinder effective waste disposal and environmental protection. Key issues include:
Addressing these inadequacies requires improved infrastructure investment, better regulatory enforcement, enhanced public awareness, and support for formalizing the informal waste sector.
India generates over 1,50,000 tonnes of municipal solid waste (MSW) per day. The per capita waste generation in Indian cities ranges from 200 grams to 600 grams per day. Only about 75-80% of the municipal solid waste gets collected and only 22-28% of this waste is processed and treated. Current systems in India cannot cope with the volumes of waste generated by an increasing urban population. This has an adverse impact on public health, the environment and the economy. To address these concerns, understanding the shortcomings in solid waste management system in the country is a prerequisite; the following can be highlighted in this context:
At collection level:
At treatment or processing level:
At disposal level:
At society level:
As of now there is indifference in citizens and lack of contribution of people towards waste management. The importance of segregation and recycling is not well understood.
At administrative and policy level:
These shortcomings prove to be a major hindrance in the waste management in India. In this context, new Solid Waste Management Rules (SWM), 2016 may improve SWM system in India as it promotes segregation at source, user fee for collection, compost marketing, promotion of waste to energy etc.