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India’s First Pilot Project For Refuse Derived Fuel Plant Launched In Tura

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The plant is a collaboration of the Government of Meghalaya, Tura Municipal Board and Chamhana GW of South Korea

HT Bureau

GUWAHATI, May 17: Meghalaya chief minister Conrad K Sangma along with the Ambassador of South Korea to India Chang Jae-Bok on Tuesday inaugurated the pilot project for a refuse derived fuel plant in Tura, the district headquarter of West Garo Hills.

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A first of its kind project in the entire country being set up by a Korean company in India, the plant situated at the landfill site at Rongkhon Songital is a collaboration of the Government of Meghalaya, Tura Municipal Board and Chamhana GW of South Korea.

The current project in Tura has been envisioned as a working model demonstration (Proof of Concept), to manage the daily incoming municipal garbage of Tura town and its adjoining areas.

Inaugurating the project, the chief minister said that the entire concept of turning waste to energy will completely redefine people’s perception of waste and garbage disposal.

“When I visited this site (landfill) I really wanted to do something and I didn’t know what and how but I knew that we needed to reverse this entire process of dumping the garbage here to making this place green again and more importantly finding a way… a technology that could enable us to ensure that the future waste that we generate could be put to a lot of things,” the chief minister said.

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Talking at length about the project, the chief minister informed that the project was conceptualised way back in 2019 but due to the pandemic it had to be put on hold.

The currently installed waste to energy plant will work by converting all waste except recyclables like metals, glass wood and e-waste, construction waste, etc., into fuel briquettes. The fuel briquettes can then be used as a replacement for coal and charcoal.

The chief minister was optimistic that if the pilot project is successful the Government will expand and install similar waste conversion plants in other parts of the state.

Terming the project as a win-win for all, the Ambassador of South Korea to India, Chang Jae-Bok, who is on his maiden visit to Meghalaya, said that the pilot project is the start of many meaningful and mutually beneficial collaborations that Korea and India could have in the field of technology that has the potential to greatly enhance the quality of people’s lives.

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“Our (Republic of Korea) Embassy in New Delhi will make an effort to further develop this kind of mutually beneficial projects and cooperation in the future.” he said.

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The Hills Times
The Hills Timeshttps://www.thehillstimes.in/
The Hills Times, a largely circulated English daily published from Diphu and printed in Guwahati, having vast readership in hills districts of Assam, and neighbouring Nagaland, Meghalaya, Arunachal Pradesh and Manipur.
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