News

Meet 58-Year-Old Man From Manipur Who Is Using Plastic Waste To Make Brooms

A 58-year-old innovator from Manipur has found a way of re-using the disposed of plastic water bottles to combat the problem of plastic pollution in the state while also generating income for the people of his village

Published

on

New Delhi: Heaps of plastic waste including plastic bottles, cups, straws, and wrappers dumped by the roadside, littered around his residence, in the local park, near public offices, around schools and in the nearby forest too prompted 58-year-old Usham Krishna Singh to act. Resident of Chingkhu Awang Leikai, Imphal East, Manipur, Mr Singh learnt about the dangers of plastic pollution when the Government of Manipur announced a complete ban on the use of plastic bags in June 2018. He also learnt from the Directorate of Environment of Manipur that five per cent of the total solid waste generated per day by Imphal city is plastic. The newly acquired information made him question the ban which made only plastic carry bags illegal while plastic bottles which make up a huge part of the plastic litter in the region was not banned.

Also Read: Dia Mirza Questions Everyone On How Much Waste We Are Generating, Says It Is Time To Rethink

This prompted him to find a way in which he could reuse the disposed of plastic bottles productively and combat plastic pollution. On researching ways to reuse plastic items, Mr. Singh with the help of his eldest son, 30-year-old Usham Ashok Singh, came up with the idea of manufacturing brooms carved out of disposable plastic water bottles. These plastic brooms work and look similar to conventional brooms made of bamboo found in the market. Mr. Singh told NDTV,

I have fond memories of rivers and drains flowing freely and during floods, they brought plants and insects to the land. But now, the rivers seem so choked with garbage and floods bring mounds and mounds of plastics. There is a big lake in Manipur, Loktak Lake, which can be called the lifeline of Manipur. Most of our waste goes in this lake, thereby posing serious threats to the environment and ecology of Manipur. To save our Lake and environment from pollution of plastic waste materials, I worked on the idea of making brooms out of plastic bottles.

He further added,

Initially some people mocked me when I used to collect disposed of plastic bottles from streets in my bag every time I used to go to work or to run an errand or just for a stroll. But it did not discourage me. Rather, I used to feel even more motivated to try harder in my pursuit of building a machine for recycling plastic. With time people of my village understood me and now some people even bring empty plastic bottles to my home.

Technical Knowledge About Machines Helped The Father-Son Duo In Recycling Plastic Bottles

Mr. Singh works as a pump operator in the Water Supply Department under the Public Health Engineering Department, Government of Manipur. His son Ashok runs an electronics repairing centre. Using the technical knowledge about machines, they successfully created an apparatus for recycling used plastic water bottles into brooms after hard work of three months.
Elaborating on the procedure of making the broom, Mr. Singh said he uses a horse-knife with the help of which the plastic bottles are sliced to very thin pieces, almost in the form of threads. The plastic threads are then made rigid by applying hot air-gun used by Ashok in repairing mobile phones. He uses bamboo sticks to hold the plastic threads. For manufacturing one broom, 30 bottles of one-litre capacity are required.

Usham Krishna Singh with the broom made by him using the waste plastic bottles

Initially, Mr. Singh could make only two brooms in one day. But gradually after some failed experiments, he got the idea of installing an electric motor. With the help of the electric motor, he is now able to produce 20 to 30 brooms in one day. He said,

We are still experimenting and trying new things. Due to financial and technical limitations, I have confined the workshop to using only plastic bottles to make brooms. But I hope to widen the scope of my work and use other plastic items which are disposed of as waste, especially the single-use plastic items like straws, cups, plates and carry bags and make more products out of those.

Also Read: Beat Plastic Pollution: Students At IIT Kharagpur On Operation ‘Zero Single-Use Plastic’ In Campus

How Recycling Plastic Bottles Is Generating Income For Villagers

Mr. Singh has formed a Self-Help Group (SHG) called, ‘Usham Bihari & Maipak Plastic Recycle Industry’ and is planning to register it soon as a small scale enterprise. The SHG is currently helping in income generation of 10 villagers, both men and women. Mr. Singh said,

Even though income generation was not the primary motive, I am happy to see that we are able to provide a source income to people of my village.

He further said that the demand for his brooms is increasing in not only his own village but some of the nearby villages too. They have also started selling the brooms in city markets. Mr. Singh and his team are currently making two kinds of brooms- one by using waste plastic water bottles selling at a price of Rs.150 and the other with soft drinks plastic bottles selling at a price of Rs. 200.

Women of Usham Krishna Singh’s village making brooms from plastic threads prepared by finely cutting plastic bottles

Mr. Singh has, till date, made 500 brooms and has invested around Rs 20,000 for the whole set up for recycling, which includes the cost of the motor, other parts of the machine and raw materials like nails, wires, and bamboos.

With the tagline-‘If you love your future, love your environment’, the SHG formed by Mr. Singh aspires to include more people to have more hands in the battle against plastic pollution in Manipur and in the process also try and help the economically weaker sections of his village earn some money.

Also Read: Manipur’s Ukhrul Becomes Plastic Free As Administration And Locals Come Together And Say No To Plastic

NDTV – Dettol Banega Swachh India campaign lends support to the Government of India’s Swachh Bharat Mission (SBM). Helmed by Campaign Ambassador Amitabh Bachchan, the campaign aims to spread awareness about hygiene and sanitation, the importance of building toilets and making India open defecation free (ODF) by October 2019, a target set by Prime Minister Narendra Modi, when he launched Swachh Bharat Abhiyan in 2014. Over the years, the campaign has widened its scope to cover issues like air pollutionwaste managementplastic banmanual scavenging and menstrual hygiene. The campaign has also focused extensively on marine pollutionclean Ganga Project and rejuvenation of Yamuna, two of India’s major river bodies.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Exit mobile version