Waste Management in Pakistan: Dr. Mahmood A. Khwaja

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SDPI News and Research Bulletin 23 (2) April - june, 2016

http://sdpi.org/publicatio…/…/Vol.23No.2(April-June2016).pdf
www.sdpi.org...

Waste Management in Pakistan


Dr. Mahmood A. Khwaja

Waste management is rapidly increasing issue and a complex problem in more than
one way, first and foremost, it relates to environmental and health issues. Wastes sites
pollute all segments of environment, including soil, water and air. The waste problem
gets more complicated and serious, as the residents of the surrounding wastes areas
are most often very poor , uneducated, lack awareness and also with no health care
facilities around. Children of all ages are seen playing around at wastes dump sites and
are exposed to disease causing bacteria, viruses etc. - a risk to their health. Waste is a
valuable resource, if collected, segregated, re-used & recycled. Waste from one
industry could possibly be used as raw material for another industry. According to
UNEP SDG Fact Sheet 2015 & WHO 2012 report, in low and middle income countries
total death due to environmental pollution is around 8.4 million people, 10% of which is
thought to be due to contaminated wastes/sites.

According to an EPA study, around 20 million M/tons of solid waste/annum is produced


in Pakistan (47,000 MT/day. In Karachi alone, around 47,000/day) most of which is
thrown around in open, nearby water bodies, agriculture land, markets etc. There is a
dire need to work out the specific quantum of waste generation from the industry, health
care sector, agriculture and household/office waste, to help develop information based
controlled measures, & strategy and action plan towards environmentally sound
management of the same. Huge quantities of municipal solid waste, waste water &
industrial releases (liquid & solids) is not treated or recycled and is another fast
emerging waste management issue.

Level of any waste management (collection, segregation, transport & disposal) varies
from area to area & site to site. In city like Islamabad, in most cases there is daily hand
cart waste (mixed waste put in a plastic shopping bag outside the houses) carried
/collected by CDA employees. In city like Peshawar, residents throw at a designated
spot (center of the town/street/road side), from where it is collected by municipal
disposal staff in municipality vehicles. In most cases the waste carried from the town is
dumped in open in the outskirts (a few miles away) of the city/town. At places like
Talhad (situated between Abbottabad & Haripur) there are huge mountains of municipal
and medical waste (piled up over the years) which are just set to fire daily and its
burning continues day & night almost for 24 hours, with continuous emission of odor
and smoke, so injurious to health of the residents. Designated waste disposal
spots/sites are few in the country and environmentally sound landfills even fewer. In
rural and other areas small heaps of waste (including used plastic shopping bags) are
just shown the light by a match stick and burnt, resulting in un-controlled non-point
sources causing air pollution.

Some private companies in Lahore, Karachi & Islamabad are offering waste disposal
services on payment and some of these even undertake segregation of wastes and its
recycling and taking to/selling the recycled items (paper, glass, metal canes and
compostable organic waste) to relevant buyers/industries. Individual waste pickers are
also seen working on waste thrown outside the homes & at waste dumps,
picking/collecting recyclable items, without any self-protection from the un-hygienic
surroundings and taking risk to their health. Like Egypt, there is a dire need to regularize
waste management in the country and taking measures for the safety of the waste
pickers/recyclers who are mostly below teen age children. Waste-pickers association
may be constituted by the government in consultation and with support of FPCCI and
provincial CCIs. Such measure can help boost the “Recycling” industry and enhance its
contribution towards national economy, as well as safeguarding workers/public health
and their well-being.

R& D institution, academia and civil society organizations/NGOs need to carry out
research work and collect data to show the economic losses due to “Waste of Waste”
as a resource and economic loss (enhanced medical bills) due to deteriorating health of
residents living in the surroundings of waste dump, specially growing children.
Economic losses are also due to prolonged unused hundreds (if not thousands) square
meters of land which turns waste (zero fertility for crop growth)) because of disposal of
wastes spread on it or due to standing waste water, turned chemically contaminated
because of discharge of industrial effluents (land in the surroundings of Qasur , Sialkot
in Punjab & Nawab Shah in Sindh). Waste management program further help in
creating jobs/employment, thus minimizing unemployment and help poverty alleviation
in the country.

Waste management sector need to be regularized as an industry, with appropriate NOC


requirements for issuing permit. Like many other countries, Extended Producer
Responsibility (EPR) need to be introduced and promoted in the country, so that to
sensitize the products producers (polluters) to be also partly responsible (taking back
their end of life products/products waste) to help waste management. Products
consumers/public are to be also educated to support such EPR program. Waste
reduction at source need to be practiced with process efficiency improvement,
employment of best environment technology and best environment practices Waste
management awareness/education to be introduced at school levels and interest of the
students for the same be enhanced with practical activities for them at designated sites.

Foreign companies from Turkey, Malaysia, Korea and other countries can share their
country experience/success stories and provide useful inputs and support towards
development of national waste management strategy/plan and implementation of the
same in the country. Such companies, on expression of their interest may be allowed to
work under appropriate terms & conditions on commercial basis. However, projects like
“Waste to Energy” need not be encouraged and most carefully looked at. Most of such
proposed projects are based on “Waste Incineration” which (i) need energy inputs first,
and (ii) it not only means waste of a valuable resource by burning it but also promotion
of waste generation (rather waste reduction) to keep such project/plant running to their
full capacity. Incineration of wastes at below standard operating temperatures produces
hazardous chemical gases like dioxins, furans & others (in addition to climate changing
carbon dioxide) which are persistent in nature and injurious to public health and their on
line monitoring require installation of expensive technology resulting in enhanced cost
of the energy produced.

-Dr. Mahmood A. Khwaja, Senior Adviser, Chemicals, Hazardous Wastes/Sites and


Sustainable Industrial Development, Sustainable Development Policy Institute (SDPI),
Islamabad Pakistan www.sdpi.org; www.sdpi.tv; 092 51 2278134 & 36

-President, International Society of Doctors for Environment (ISDE), www.isde.org

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