Sanitation

"SWM-ing" against the tide

While solid waste management is largely ignored by Panchayats and citizens, Goa manages to go against this trend. How does it do this?

Author : Chicu Lokgariwar

The road to hell, they say, is paved with good intentions. A visit to almost any village or small town in India today will serve to confirm that statement. In an undoubtedly laudable attempt to keep the village clean, gram panchayats tend to dump waste in a convenient patch of land on the outskirts. That is, those few of them who actually think of the issue of solid waste management (SWM) at all. For most panchayats, sanitation begins and ends with defecation.

Counting toilets:

Piling up the waste:

And floating it down:

The impact of solid waste on our water bodies

Goa seems to be the exception.

'SWM'-ing against the tide:

But if not here, then where? Where does the Goan garbage go? Into the sea, like that of Mumbai?

Sorting the matter out:

Improperly disposed waste places a heavy load on our sewage treatment facilities

Doing their bit:

Challenges:

Yes, it should be. But  till that happens, Goa is doing a fine job of managing it's garbage. Will the other states learn?

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