No solutions for residential e-waste

Though Bangalore prides itself as the IT city, neither the Bruhat Bangalore Mahanagara Palike (BBMP) nor the Karnataka State Pollution Control Board (KSPCB) have any solutions to manage the residential e-waste.

So much so that neither of the departments have been able to come up with a mechanism to even measure the amount of residential e-waste generated in the city.

After the BBMP launched the waste management campaign on October 1 last year, the rules specified the disposal of e-waste separately once a month. However, apart from voluntary initiatives to collect e-waste, there is no other mechanism to tackle this problem.

“Currently there is no method to gauge, collect or manage residential e-waste. There is no plan right now to deal with this problem either. E-waste is now being disposed of with dry and wet waste which might cause problems,” said KSPCB chairman Vaman Acharya.

The Palike  has no department specifically working for e-waste. “The Palike currently does not look into e-waste generated from residential areas,” said Chief Health Officer of BBMP Devaki Umesh.

The KSPCB had entered into liaison with 21 organisations and NGOs that look into industrial e-waste.

“From residential areas, e-waste is now being disposed off with either wet or dry waste. Regardless of the way in which this waste is collected and managed, the e-waste present will harm the environment while decomposing or burning,” said Senior Environment Officer of KSPCB D R Kumaraswamy.

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