Recycling& Environment
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RECYCLING AND ENVIRONMENT INDUSTRY ASSOCIATION OF INDIA REIAI Weekly E-Newsletter Recycling & Environment Year 6, Issue no. 28 July 9, 2021 TOP NEWS INSIDE “Nature is painting for us, day after day, pictures of infinite beauty.” NGT lens on illegal stone mining in Ganjam district John Ruskin 17 states have no action plan against air pollution, reveals RTI Air pollution: Over 4,000 deaths in Hyderabad linked to PM2.5 exposure 66 dairies, six dyeing units shut down in east Delhi Tata Power vows to exit coal by 2050 Door-to-door plastic waste collection soon 2 Recycling & Environment Message from Director General Message from Director General Friends, Despite lockdown 2.0, air pollution did not go down this time. However, change is in the air in Delhi – in the minister! Paint made from cow dung is in the market. ‘Sherni’ is on your screens. RSPCB launches Green Rating Incentive Scheme in Rajasthan with CII. While the long-term outlook for coal as a fuel remains grim, the short-term R K Bansal outlook has improved significantly over the last year. And an interesting article about Secretary & Director General crocodiles. All this and more in this week’s newsletter. Rasogullahs get added to the menu being served by Mr Nyati! How pollution got converted into nutrition for school children and orphan children. And pollution from a rasgullah unit became a source of wealth for the producing unit. Read these fascinating accounts in this week’s journey. We look forward to receiving your contributions to the newsletter and feedback on how to improve and enrich the content further. Happy reading! 9 July 2021 3 Recycling & Environment More ice creams ----- and rasogullahs! As we saw last week, the ice-cream company was struggling to figure out, why the sales realization went down, despite the fact that it produced the same numbers of ice-cream batches every week and week after week for last two months. It was eventually suspected that the workers were leaving more ice-creams while unloading the equipment or vessels, so that first sequential wash water is thicker or better. It was also envisaged that workers on the shop floor, when nobody was watching, could also deliberately mix some ice-cream from the batch after unloading it into the storage vessel. While these suspicions remained unproven, yet the company decided on the side of caution and the free distribution of the so-called ice-cream shakes, the first sequential wash water, was suspended. It was like one step forward and back again where it was. The company therefore still had the K P Nyati problem at hand, as to what could be the alternative solution? Executive Director & Founder NPC suggested that company should bottle the wash water and sell them in the market. Company’s sales team objected on two grounds. Firstly, the quantity of this wash water every batch is so small and do not merit the marketing effort. Secondly and more importantly, it was argued that company’s loyal customers may fear that the ice-cream batches not meeting the ice-cream quality standards perhaps are getting converted into shakes. Such a fear could have adverse impact on the sale of ice- creams as well. Company remained back at square one. In the meantime, NPC explored the area around the factory’s close proximity as to who could be the potential beneficiaries of this free ice-cream shake. NPC located two potential recipients. One was Orphan children’s home and other was municipal school. Both agreed to distribute the shake amongst the children. Company started supplying the ice-cream shake to these two entities on alternate days. The problem of disposing the so-called shakes was quickly solved. Every stakeholder was happy, though there was a bit of resentment and disappointment within the employees of the company. Although nothing much was noted as a response from the orphan children’s home, school on the other hand was delighted to observe that the absenteeism amongst the children dropped significantly. In fact, the management of the school wanted the shake to be delivered every day. So, this was a Pollution-to-Nutrition story. Something similar was the case of a company in Bikaner that was producing Rasogullas and canning them for exports. While rasogullas need solids from the milk to make them, the whey water was discharged into a concrete rectangular tank constructed within the boundary wall on one side. When enquired, a company employee explained that the whey water is good for the health of cows, buffaloes and other stray animals and they like to drink the whey water. The one who enquired, suggested to the company employee, that this seems to be case of fat-balance. He went on to explain that milk contains 4-6% fat and rasogulla is supposed to be fat free. Obviously, most of this fat is in whey water and it exerts high BOD, if one were to treat it in ETP. Obviously, company saw money in whey water and therefore started recovering this fat in the form of ghee or butter oil. Some more next week. 4 Recycling & Environment Environment CUTTACK: The alleged illegal stone quarrying at Satadhangudi hill in NGT lens on illegal stone Sanakhemundi tehsil of Ganjam district has come under the National Green mining in Ganjam district Tribunal (NGT) scanner. An expert committee constituted on Friday has been asked to submit its report within four weeks. The alleged illegal stone quarrying at Satadhangudi hill in Sanakhemundi tehsil The committee includes senior scientists from Odisha State Pollution of Ganjam district has come under the Control Board, State Environment Impact Assessment Authority (SEIAA), National Green Tribunal (NGT) scanner. Integrated Regional Office of Ministry of Environment Forest and Climate Change, and Ganjam Collector. Read more Goa: No extension, CZMP public hearing NGT directs Jindal Saw to Pay Rs 4 cr as per schedule, says NGT compensation for damaging houses The National Green Tribunal (NGT) has dismissed Goa The National Green Tribunal has directed Jindal Saw Ltd to Foundation’s review application, praying for a time limit of deposit Rs 4 crore as compensation because illegal six months, instead of an August 31 deadline of to finalise blasting by it had caused damage to a number of houses in the Coastal Zone Management Plan (CZMP) for Goa. Goa Pur village in Rajasthan's Bhilwara district. Foundation had sought the extended time to prepare the coastal plan stating that it is to ensure a fair public hearing Cracks have developed on the walls of houses and there is and sufficient time to finalise the plan. leakage of water from underground tanks of some houses, it said. Read more Read more RECYCLING AND ENVIRONMENT INDUSTRY ASSOCIATION OF INDIA 5 Recycling & Environment Environment Prakash Javadekar’s exit as the Union Minister for Information and Broadcasting and the chief spokesperson for the government comes The exits: Odds stacked at a time when its handling of the second Covid-19 wave has come against him, Prakash under intense scrutiny and drawn flak from the Opposition. Javadekar innings comes to If the start of the lockdown last year following the outbreak of the pandemic led to the migrant crisis, the deadly second Covid-19 wave an end this March-April saw hospitals running short of medical oxygen and With questions being raised and the beds, and ships and aircraft being sent out to bring home oxygen government’s handling of the second wave supplies – images which accentuated the lack of preparedness. coming under scrutiny, it fell on the I&B Read more Ministry to blunt criticism, including in the international media, though it had no role in dealing with the situation on the ground. Tata Power vows to exit coal by 2050 Indian policy gives aluminum battery a Praveer Sinha, the CEO and managing director of India's chance to take on lithium in Evs Tata Power, has unveiled ambitious plans to transform the A drive to reduce dependence on imported materials and energy company’s generation portfolio toward “clean and technology, especially from China, is pushing India to green” sources, in order to reach carbon neutrality before invest in a battery technology that uses aluminium rather 2050. than lithium as the key ingredient. Read more Read more RECYCLING AND ENVIRONMENT INDUSTRY ASSOCIATION OF INDIA 6 Recycling & Environment Environment NGT forms fresh panel, seeks report on pollution caused by slaughter houses in Ghaziabad Read more https://epaper.patrika.com/imageview_310250_239973552_4_1_05-07-2021_13_i_1_sf.html https://epaper.patrika.com/imageview_313015_213792384_4_1_09-07-2021_17_i_1_sf.html RECYCLING AND ENVIRONMENT INDUSTRY ASSOCIATION OF INDIA 7 Recycling & Environment Environment https://epaper.patrika.com/imageview_312177_1197542096_4_1_08-07-2021_2_i_1_sf.html Organisation man Bhupender Yadav takes charge as Environment Minister Bhupender Yadav Thursday assumed office as the Minister of Environment, Forest and Climate Change, taking over the charge from Prakash Javadekar. Yadav today planted a sapling on the premises of the Indira Paryavaran Bhavan, the headquarters of the Environment Ministry, before assuming office. Read more RECYCLING AND ENVIRONMENT INDUSTRY ASSOCIATION OF INDIA 8 Recycling & Environment Air Pollution After dust, power plants top source of air pollution in Delhi in summers: Study NEW DELHI: After dust (52.5%), power plants are the biggest contributor to Delhi’s PM 2.5 concentration during summers, a new study led by the department of civil engineering at IIT Kanpur has found. Among organic aerosols found in the city’s air during the summers, solid fuel combustion has emerged as the biggest contributor 16.2%), followed by traffic (12.3%) and cooking (7.3%), it reveals. Read more 17 states have no action plan against air pollution, reveals RTI NAGPUR: This winter too, citizens in most part of the country will be breathing toxic air, with 17 states not even having a plan in place to beat air pollution, reveal documents procured under the Right to Information (RTI) Act.