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Public-Private Partnership Model Of Urban Waste Management Needs $5 Billion A Year, Says Study

A joint study by Assocham and Ernst & Young titled, ‘The big ‘W’ impact: effective urban waste management solutions in India’, suggests that there is a need for comprehensive and forward-looking policy for waste management, to accelerate a shift towards a modern and healthy urban living

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New Delhi: The implementation of municipal solid waste management (MSWM) through the Public-Private Partnership (PPP) model in Indian cities will require the investment of $5 billion (around Rs 34,695 crore) per year, a joint report by industry chamber Assocham and British advisory multinational Ernst & Young (EY) said on Sunday.

The study titled, “The big ‘W’ impact: effective urban waste management solutions in India” suggested the need for a comprehensive and forward-looking policy which can accelerate a shift towards a modern and healthy urban living.

“We need appropriate policy prescriptions to ensure that waste management should be an important part of the economic cycle,” said the report, adding that, besides toilet construction and eliminating open defecation, an increased focus on waste management under the government’s Swachh Bharat program will be a value addition.

Also Read: Fighting India’s Garbage Crisis: After Going Open Defecation Free Rural Haryana Now Aims To Improve Its Waste Management

According to the report, since the responsibility to ensure proper service delivery and compliance of standards, remains with the local bodies, there is a need to develop in-house financial and managerial capability to award contracts to the private sector and monitor the services provided.

MSWM is a fit case for the PPP model in India as urban local bodies are not financially and technically strong enough to manage solid waste, it said.

The collection efficiency in urban areas of the country is poor at 70 per cent, and is still manual in nature, according to the report.

It recommended the use of emerging technologies such as block chain for waste management and sanitation.

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.

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