Mumbai Waste Management Article
Mumbai Waste Management Article
In this first part of a series on waste management in Mumbai, we explore the systems laid
I take a delivery of vegetables, remove the vegetables from the plastic bag, and the plastic
wrapping. The bag and the wrapping go into the bin, followed a while later with the peels
and discarded bits of vegetables. The bin seems forever ready to take in whatever I throw
into it: medicine wrappers, sanitary waste, paper, old batteries and so on.
While researching for this series of articles I realised both the quantum and variety of things
that we, a household of four, end up throwing in the bin every day, and quite thoughtlessly
so. The results: one full bin of 2.5 litres and another of 12 litres. Extrapolate this to
understand the amount of garbage that the 21,673,000 people living in Mumbai generate.
Where does it all go?
Sr.n
Type of solid waste Percentage
o
4 Plastic 3.24%
A variety of things and sources contribute to the waste generated in the city, requiring a
complex ecosystem for its management. “This is the challenge. Right now Deonar dumping
ground, Kanjurmarg, Mulund, all of them are overflowing,” says Ashwin Malwade of Ek
Saath Foundation.
It is the responsibility of the Urban Local Body (ULB) to ensure the proper disposal of each
stream or type, which in the case of Mumbai is the BMC. Depending on the kind of waste
and the place of its generation, the journey of waste differs.
In this first part of the series, we take a look at the overall systems BMC has in place for
waste management and at household waste.
BMC
arranges for point-to-point collection of garbage and generators have to ensure that their
garbage reaches these collection trucks. Pic Via X from MCGM
A different set of rules apply to bulk generators. As per the Solid Waste Management Rules,
2016 establishments which generate more than 100 kg of garbage of all streams put
together are bulk generators. Also included in this category are gated communities which
are more than 5000 sqm or have more than 300 flats. Ashwin explains that they are
required to take care of their garbage themselves: tie up with recyclers for dry waste and
compost their wet waste.
Shikha Agarwal who stays in a complex with 128 households in Andheri says, “Every
household segregates at source. The committee members have taken a lot of effort to
educate people about this.”
The housekeeping staff employed by them collect the organic and dry waste in two separate
bins. The society has constructed a huge room at the entrance to the complex where the
garbage is kept in wheelie bins and is then picked up by the BMC’s garbage pick-up vehicle
everyday.
Pre-pandemic the BMC was enforcing this strictly, something that wasn’t possible due to the
restrictions brought on by the pandemic. He says that post-pandemic too some bulk
generator complexes have gone back to this system; they compost their wet waste in situ
and are zero landfill contributors. For those who don’t compost themselves, the waste is
largely picked up by private recyclers. “BMC connects them with recyclers and at subsidized
rates; these bulk generators have been asked to give their waste to these recyclers and
waste composting units,” says Ashwin.