Bulk waste generators should comply with Solid Waste Management rules, says MCC
Updated:
Updated:
January 07, 2021 21:03 IST
It is set to build pressure on them to establish their own units for recycling waste
Share Article
AAA
MCC Commissioner Gurudutt Hegde and other officials at a waste recycling plant installed in an apartment in Mysuru, on Thursday. | Photo Credit:
M.A. SRIRAM
It is set to build pressure on them to establish their own units for recycling waste
The Mysuru City Corporation (MCC) will direct bulk waste generators to manage the solid and wet waste independently so as to reduce the pressure on the civic body and comply with the solid waste management rules.
Work on two waste treatment plants to commence soon
Updated:
Updated:
It will augment Mysuru City Corporation’s waste-handling capacity for a decade
Share Article
AAA
Mysuru generates nearly 450 tonnes of garbage daily, a bulk of which goes to the waste treatment plant at the sewage farm at Vidyaranyapuram.
It will augment Mysuru City Corporation’s waste-handling capacity for a decade
Five years after it was first proposed and approved in principal by the Mysuru City Corporation (MCC), all paths have been cleared for establishing two new solid waste treatment and recycling plants to handle the city waste.
The two plants will come up at Kesare and Rayanakere and will augment the city’s waste handling capacity for at least a decade.