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Waste To Wealth

The document provides details about an upcoming 5th Global Sustainability Conclave on Make In India - Make for World to be held from July 25-27, 2024. It is being jointly organized by MSME Chamber of Commerce and Industry of India, Service Export Promotion Council, and India Exposition Mart Ltd. The document lists organizing committees, governing councils, and topics to be covered including plastic recycling, green energy, electrical mobility, and sustainability.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
212 views20 pages

Waste To Wealth

The document provides details about an upcoming 5th Global Sustainability Conclave on Make In India - Make for World to be held from July 25-27, 2024. It is being jointly organized by MSME Chamber of Commerce and Industry of India, Service Export Promotion Council, and India Exposition Mart Ltd. The document lists organizing committees, governing councils, and topics to be covered including plastic recycling, green energy, electrical mobility, and sustainability.

Uploaded by

shubhammsmeccii
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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MSME CHAMBER OF COMMERCE

AND INDUSTRY OF INDIA


( ISO : 9001 - 2015 )

5th Global Sustainability Conclave Make In India -


Make for World 25th - 27th July 2024
Jointly Organising with SEPC ( Service Export Promotion Council under Ministry of
Commerce and Industry Govt. of India, Delhi)
&
India Exposition Mart Ltd. ( Greater Noida )

ORGANISING COMMITTEE

CHAIRMAN VICE CHAIRMAN

RAKESH KUMAR PAWAN KUMAR


INDRAJIT GHOSH Chairman (IEML)
(Conference and Exhibition)
KANSAL
Make In India-Make for World MD Jagadamba Cutlery
Global Chairman-MSME Limited
Chamber of Commerce and
Industry of India

GOVERNING COUNCIL

STEERING COMMITTEE

Padmashri Dr.Rajagopalan Padmashri Dr.G. D. Padmashri Chetan Singh Solanki


Vasudevan Yadav Dr.Kartikeya Sarabhai
Plastic Man of India Chemical Man of India Environment Man of India The Solar Man of India
Ranjit S Baxi K D Bhardwaj Dr. Arup Kumar Misra Dr. Santanu Kumar
Director and Group Head Environment
Dutta
president of the Bureau of Chairman Pollution control
International Recycling and Energy , International Services , Board Assam Member Secretary
National Productivity Council Pollution Control Board
Assam

Dr Abhay Sinha Erik Solheim Dr. Arun Kumar Sarma K L Jain Chairman

Director General Chairman -The sixth and former Director General at North KLJ Group
Services Export UN Environment Executive East Centre for Technology
Promotion Council Director and under secretary- Application and Reach
General of the United Nations

ORGANIZING COMMITTEE

Plastic Recycling, Waste to Wealth, Flexible


Packaging & Speciality Films

Dr. Sameer Joshi Dr.Sandeep Marwah Dr.Anup K Ghosh Kapil Malhotra


Vice Chairman IPI, Global President ICMEI & Prof IIT Delhi, Global Global Business Unit Head
Advisory Board Member Chancellor AAFT - Fluoropolymers-Gujarat
Advisory Board Member
MSMECCII Fluorochemicals Ltd
MSMECCII
Dr Suneel Pandey Jeevaraj Pillai Ekta Narain Sunil Kumar
Sathyanarayanan
Director Solid Waste Joint President Co-Founder and Chief Country President India & Regional
Director Packaging IMEA Henkel
Management TERI Packaging, Uflex Ltd. Business Officer - Recykal Adhesive Technologies India Pvt Ltd

Rakesh Shah Dr. Tanweer Alam Rahul V Podaar


Ravi Aggarwal
Managing Director
Life Coach, Mentor, Additional Director, IIP The Shakti Plastic
Ex President AIPAI Marketing and Business Industries
Delhi, Additional Charge
Consultant IIP Lucknow

Green Energy, Hydrogen, Biofuel, Biogas, ESG,


CSR & Carbon Negative

Dr. A. R. Shukla Colonel Rohit Dev Gaurav Kedia Dr. J P Gupta

Chair,Environment & Green


President - Indian Biogas Operational Art & Strategic Chairman - Indian Biogas Hydrogen Committee, PHDCCI
Association Thinking Association Summit Chair, ICS 2023
Dr Rakesh Chandra Mallikharjuna Babu Dr Vibha Dhawan Peter Bertrand
Agarwal Kayala
Diplomatic Relations | Green
The Environmental & Vice Chancellor, Galgotias Director General Strategic Partnership | Donor
Consumer Protection ( TERI ) Coordination | Programme
University, India
Foundation, Exe. Chairman Support

Electrical Mobility, Battery Refurbishment


Recycling & OEM’s

Dr. Shailendra (Dr.


Rajesh Garg Deb Mukherji Dr. Rajeev Mishra
SHAILENDRA) Saroj
Director and Founder Chairman International National-President Federation of
Managing Director
Federation of electric vehicle electric vehicle Association
REDON Lithium Industries Omega Seiki Mobility P Ltd. Association

Swadesh Srivastava Vijay Malik Yash Pal Sachar Vikas Gupta


Head Emerging Mobility BU- DGM Govt Sale EVBU-Tata Motor Vice President - Corporate Affairs Founder CEO of Sampoorn EV
Hero MotorCorp Ltd Passenger Vehicles Limited @ Ashok Leyland Pvt. Ltd.
instead of Eashwa Automotive,
TBA TBA

Virendra Goyal TBA TBA


Head Business Development -EV
Charging The Tata Power Company
Limited

E - Waste Recycling, Technology, EPR &


Circular Economy

ALN Rao Raj Kumar Prabhjot Sodhi


Former Country Program Manager,
CEO Deshwal, Waste
CEO Exigo Recycling Global Environment Facility- Small Grant
Management Pvt Ltd Programme-UNDP, CEE for 14 years

Sustainability

Prof. Dr. P K Rajput Asim Saha Mahesh Kasture Bineesha P

Global Leadership Coach | Resident Director MSME Board Member


Chief Manager (R&D). Bharat Technology Development Board
Pharma Business Leader | Chamber of Commerce
Petroleum Corporation Ltd. (Under Department of Science
Keynote speaker and Industry of India and Technology Govt of India)
Ulhas Parlikar Hanumant Saraf T. Jaya Surya Yogesh Kumar
Global Consultant Deputy general Manager General Manager
(Waste Management, Circular Vice President Reliance
Hindustan Petroleum MSME Chamber of Commerce
Economy, Policy Advocacy & Co Industries and Industry of India
processing) Corporation Ltd.

TBA TBA TBA TBA

Nestle India Limited Indian Oil Corporation Godrej Industries Colgate Pamolive
Ltd. Limited

TBA TBA TBA TBA

Bislery International pepsico Coca cola India TBA


Start-Up Conclave, Funding from PSU’s,
Banks, SIDBI & IPO

TBA TBA

Dr Nancy Juneja
TBA TBA
GlobalChairperson-
MENTORx Women

Handicrafts, Jute Leather, Textiles, Garments,


Sport Goods & Home Furnishing Items

TBA TBA

Dipten Basu
TBA TBA
Vice President
MSME Chamber of Commerce
and Industry of India

Social Media

TBA TBA

Jitender Chawla Gaurav Gupta TBA TBA


Chartered President
Director SMEBIZZ
Lions Club
MSME Chamber of
Commerce and Industry
of India

THE Hon’ble Prime Minister launched the Swachh Bharat


Mission on 15 August 2014. The government is committed to
take the Swachh Bharat Mission to the next level. ‘The
Swachh Bharat Mission has transformed one side of
swacchata, now we will get latest technologies to transform
Waste to Energy and Wealth in a major mission’. The PM-
STIAC (Prime Minister’s Science, Technology and Innovation
Advisory Council) recommended establishing a Waste to
Wealth Mission (W2W) which would identify real time major
waste problems and sentinel sites across India and deploy
latest technologies addressing waste across India.
Consequently, the Office of the Principal Scientific Adviser to
the Government of India set up a Waste to Wealth mission
to test, validate and provide technological solutions for the
management of waste. The ‘Waste to Wealth’ Mission aims
to identify, test, and validate affordable decentralised
technologies, adaptable to local requirements for waste
management. Waste management in the developing world
at Vigyan Bhavan, New Delhi is critical for both climate change and global health; it is
imperative that the very core of the climate change and
global health is addressed. The solutions validated and
demonstrated are exemplars which address waste
management on site, in a decentralised manner, leading to
decreased transport costs in waste handling, with a goal
towards zero landfill.
Waste – The Challenge
In India, waste and waste management is a complex challenge with multiple components. The
rough estimate of total waste generated every year is 1236 MT with no estimate of waste dumped
into our water bodies. Some waste is unique to India such as pan masala, shampoo, etc. sachets,
hair waste, animal / food / agri waste discarded without thought. And so, India has to find its own
solution for managing this waste. Waste management is a universal issue affecting every single
person in the world. Currently, about 2.01 billion

metric tons of Municipal Solid Waste (MSW) is produced annually worldwide. The World Bank
estimates overall waste generation will increase to 3.40 billion metric tons by 2050. An estimated
13.5% of today’s waste is recycled and 5.5% is composted, between one-third and 40% of waste
generated worldwide is not managed properly and instead dumped or openly burned. Poorly
managed waste is contaminating the world’s oceans, clogging drains and causing flooding,
transmitting diseases via breeding of vectors, increasing respiratory problems through airborne
particles from burning of waste, harming animals that consume waste unknowingly, and affecting
economic development such as through diminished tourism. Unmanaged and improperly managed
waste from decades can create unimagined misery for generations to come. Therefore, investing in
waste management is critical and a no-brainer. The Global Waste Management market is expected
to grow from $285 billion in 2016 to $435 billion by 2023, growing at a compound annual growth rate
(CAGR) of 6.2 %. The Global Waste Recycling revenue will grow exponentially, especially for plastic
and electronic waste. The World Bank already has a record of investing in waste management
infrastructure across the globe. It has moved more than $4.7
Waste – The Challenge
In India, waste and waste management is a complex challenge with multiple
components. The rough estimate of total waste generated every year is 1236 MT
with no estimate of waste dumped into our water bodies. Some waste is unique
to India such as pan masala, shampoo, etc. sachets, hair waste, animal/
food/agri waste discarded without thought. And so, India has to find its own
solution for managing this waste. Waste management is a universal issue
affecting every single person in the world. Currently, about 2.01 billion

“Burning

systems to dispose of that same (one) tonne properly.
( McKinsey, 2016 )

billion to more than 340 solid waste management 3. Advanced technology for use of waste
programs since 2000.

The Waste Conundrum Torrefaction of biomass waste to bio-coal, use


of the inert material for road construction, etc.
Waste management is complex because of the
multiple agencies and responsibilities: *For both collection and treatment of waste in the complex
Indian conditions, decentralized, in-situ solutions need to be
developed.)

1. Collection of waste
To add to the above complexities is the large number of
stakeholders involved in the waste chain in India:
Municipal Solid Waste – Civic/household
Waste from waster bodies
Local urban bodies
Waste from soil (MLP, sachets and other
Municipal Corporation; different collection bodies for
plastic waste contaminating our top soil, etc.)
Animal/cattle waste MSW, the water bodies in India, open drains have both
MSW, dead animals, etc., have different collection system.
State government
2. Treatment of waste Various Ministries of the central government (Ministry of
Environment, Forest and Climate Change, Ministry of
Legacy waste – about 80% waste in landfills
Drinking Water and Sanitation, Ministry of New and
like Ghazipur landfill is inert and cannot be
Renewable Energy, Ministry of Chemicals and Fertilizers,
used as Refuse Derived Fuel (RDF) and needs
technology that can reuse the inert material Ministry of Agriculture & Farmers’ Welfare, Ministry of
constructively, such that it can be disposedoff. Power, etc.)
Pyrolyse waste which is beyond reuse/recycle
(toxic)
Decades of neglect, lack of foresight and complete absence of urban
Waste to Energy (electricity, biofuels, etc.) planning has left India staring at mountains of waste-landfills, waste-
Waste to Value (recovering valuable material choked drains, water bodies and rivers. The cumulative consequence
from waste) of decades of neglect has created “legacy waste”.
There are about 48 recognised
landfills across India, together
Authorities in Morocco covering nearly 5,000 acres of land,
with a total land value of about Rs
believethat $300m they 100,000 crore. India generates about
have investedin new 275 million tonnes of waste per year.
sanitary landfills With current waste treatment rates of
about 20 - 25 %, this leaves majority of
hasalready averted “ waste untreated, in a heap, on landfills,
$440m in and an equal amount in drains and
river bodies. Drains and water bodies,
environmental emptying out into Indian rivers, also
damage. carry with them an unimaginable
amount of waste. The Ganga is among
Ref: “How the world should cope with the top 10 polluted rivers in the world,
its growing piles of rubbish”, The together accounting for 90% of the
Economist, September 29, 2018 edition total ocean plastic pollution.

Municipalities need to have access to affordable technology which has been


piloted and validated under Indian conditions. Today, most of the
technology/equipment needed for waste management is imported, expensive and
often not suited to our varied local situations. India needs affordable, decentralised,
customised solutions for its land-constrained complex city matrix. For example,
amphibian equipment to clean water bodies is imported; indigenisation of design
and manufacturing of such equipment for smaller drains and water bodies is
essential. Robotic long-hand scavenging machines to unclog drains, booms that
filter and prevent waste in our drains entering a larger water body are some
examples, where Atmanirbhar Bharat (self-reliant India) needs to kick in
immediately. Entry to drains in India is choked with
pan mEasmalap, sohwameporo sachets, chips/kurkure packets and so on, causing
instant
flooding of cities and towns during the monsoons.

Waste to Wealth Mission: Decentralised Solution

Waste collection and recycling is now a financially viable business. Plastic and
electronic waste is premium uptake by the unorganized sector. The Municipal Solid
Waste (MSW) continues to be a challenge with need for minimum land requirements
and technology emergent.
The Waste to Wealth Mission in collaboration with the East Delhi Municipal
Corporation (EDMC) has established a Decentralised Waste Management Technology
Park at New Jaffrabad, East Delhi. The Technology Park is a pilot, providing end-to-
end solutions for waste management, from semi-automated segregation of municipal
solid waste to onsite compaction and treatment of the waste.
Municipal solid waste will be segregated onsite into combustibles fractions and non-
combustible (compostable)
a

We are the future of your business


Zero waste, Zero energy, Zero landfill

Decentralized on-site waste processing This pilot will ensure Solid Waste
Minimum land requirement Management Rules 2016 compliance
of ULB’s for reducing load on landfill
Onsite waste treatment, processing,
sites, without procurement of new
compaction, and possibility of conversion
land for waste disposal. The area
to energy required for the pilot is 1100 sqmt of
Reducing secondary waste transportation area (area currently utilized for open
cost dumping or secondary collection
Moving towards zero landfill site) with a waste processing of 10
Scaled up/replicated across varies cities in tonnes per day.
India
Decentralised processing of waste
fractions. The combustible waste will then be
is
processed on site, leaving less than 5% of
a step towards “Zero Landfill” with
inerts reaching landfill. In addition to incoming
the added advantage of reduction
MSW, floating waste from adjacent 52-cusec
drain will also be collected and processed on in
site. the
The transportation of the waste.
successful demonstration of this
pilot will allow the model to be
replicated in cities, towns and
villages across India.
The Decentralized Waste Management
Technology Park has piloted five
technologies with integrated approach for
one-stop solution for incoming fresh waste:

1. ‘Xaper’ (by M/s E3 Waste Solutions, Punjab) – An indigenous semi-automated technology


that segregates fresh mixed municipal solid waste into compostable, recyclable,
combustible, and inert fractions. The local open dump site or dhalao is replaced by Xaper
for onsite segregation and processing.

2. ‘Plasma pyrolysis Unit’ (by IIT Delhi) - for thermal disintegration of carbonaceous material
in an oxygen-starved environment into environment friendly components

3. ‘Enviro-RISE R-A1100’ (by M/s DESMI India LLP) - technology from Denmark for removal of
floating solid waste from the 52-cusec drain flowing adjacent to the technology park site.

4. ‘Gasifier’ (by M/s GD Environmental Pvt. Ltd., Maharashtra) - A 150 kg/h plant for gasification
of municipal solid waste (including COVID-19 waste) and possible conversion to energy.

Johkasou STP (by M/s Daiki Axis India Pvt. Ltd., Delhi) - A decentralized sewage
treatment technology to meet the operational and nonpotable water requirement at the
site through treatment, recycling and reuse of wastewater flowing in the 52-cusec drain.

COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT: INTEGRAL


TO WASTE MANAGEMENT
The Waste to Wealth Mission recognises that community or Behaviour Change Solutions.
“Jan Bhagidari” engagement is the crux of successful waste
Decentralized waste-to-wealth
management. Two very successful programmes have
demonstrated the effectiveness of community engagement. Approaches: Temple Waste to Gulaal,

Dhoop, Gulkand, organic waste to


Swachhta Saarthi Fellowships: Initiated to empower citizens
and individuals who are engaged in community work of waste Compost & Biogas Selecting the right unit
management, waste awareness campaigns, waste surveys, etc. for Community-Composting at Temples.
and provide them Swachhta Saarthi fellowship.
Composting technologies for waste
The fellowship was launched in 2021 to recognize students,
community workers/self-help groups, and municipal / sanitary recycling options based on
workers who are engaged in tackling the enormous challenge space/cost/maintenance efficiency. Final
of waste management, scientifically and sustainably. The
fellowship is aimed at amplifying the role of young students units selected were based on no
from schools and colleges, and citizens working in the requirement for electricity to run,
community through Self Help Groups (SHGs), or in
independent capacity in sensitizing the society towards waste affordability, small space in which the unit
management and offer innovative solutions for conversion of can be fitted, modularity in case it needed
waste to value. The 2021 cohort had 344 Swachhta Saarthis
to be moved.
consisting of high school students, college
students, and community workers from
across 27 States and 6 UTs that are currently
making an impact through their efforts in
waste management towards building a
sustainable future.

Su-Dhara Programme:
Su-Dhara is a model for addressing urban waste
by aligning science and technology with behavior
change approaches. Communities can participate
in enabling segregation and recycling to generate
waste-to-wealth solutions. Vertiver, an NGO,
oversees this programme. The methodology
adopted was:

Door-to-door research of 200 households on


willingness to participate in decentralized
solutions.
Mapping of systems to assess waste streams,
volumes and capacity to create local solutions
for waste • Identification of dece- ntralized
technologies to address organic waste.
Pilot installation of biodigester units at three
temples and 1HH Biogas Plant.

Awareness, Outreach & Training


Several measures have been adopted to spread
awareness about the concept and its various
programmes.

Creation of community volunteer groups for


addressing waste issues through “champions”.

Extensive Community engagement through one-onone interactions, communication materials, workshops,


nukkad nataks, art competitions, murals, award ceremonies and ongoing feedback and reward systems for
champions to generate buy-in and momentum for addressing waste at local levels
Creation of SHGs to promote entrepreneurial models for products created from waste.

Efforts are also being made as part of the mission to train & build capacity among the various
stakeholders to carry the movement forward. These include:

Engaging with Ward Councillors and EDMC to help scale up activities in other wards • Training waste
workers and communities on working together at Gali, Temple, Ward level to co-create solutions
Training communities in making compost, gulal and managing biogas unit
Training women to set up their own SHGs to sell products made from waste.

In addition, urgent attention is also needed in the development of skilled and trained professional personnel to operate and
maintain the waste management chain, right from collection, operation and maintenance of wastehandling plants. Central,
and integral to success, is design in the collection of centralised and decentralised waste treatment plants, and of the
equipment used. Design of waste management should be the bedrock of a well-planned smart city, town or village.
KEY HIGHLIGHTS OF THE EXHIBITION

350 + eminent speakers from across the world will participate in the conference
with 800 + industries from PAN India overseas.

Apart from Middle Industries and corporates, 400+ startups, unicorn and MSME’s
will be participating in the event along with 6000+ participants.

100 + interviews will be published by various TV channels, Magazines and


Newspapers

It will deliberate & showcase the opportunities, growth, ecosystem, emerging


trends
Ministries, MOS, Secretaries, Joint Secretaries and other Government top officials
will be the part of the mega event.

Announcement video will be released for our upcoming two mega event in Biswa
Bangla.

Collaboration/Joint Venture - B2B meetings with Japanese, Korean, Taiwan &


Italian Organization

Expected 800+ industries from PAN India and overseas.

WHO SHOULD ATTEND ?

Waste Management Company Senior Waste-to-Energy Sector


Executives Executives
Project Developers Recycling Companies Executives
Waste-to-Wealth Management Policy Makers and Regulatory
and Technology Companies Bodies

Equipment Suppliers and Fund Managers / Global


Services Companies Investors

Municipality Executives Academia - Students &


Universities
Entrepreneurs / Technologists
Senior Government Officials
WHY TO EXHIBIT ?

MEET NEW BUYERS

Drive new business opportunities by meeting and engaging with new buyers, generate
valuable leads and unlock millions of dollars worth of new business

DEVELOP NEW BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES


Develop new business opportunities and form valuable partnerships with an
international and targeted Waste Management audience.

EXPAND MARKET REACH


Exhibition will attract energy professionals from 15+ countries and the Waste
Management zone will act as the ideal platform for companies to expand their business
globally.

SHOWCASE INNOVATIONS
Help shape the future of the Waste Management industry by promoting your
company's latest innovations and technologies to global stakeholders

NETWORKING OPPORTUNITIES
Connect Waste Management professionals, form valuable partnerships and build
relationships that will drive your business forward
MSME CHAMBER OF COMMERCE AND INDUSTRY OF INDIA

ORGANIZER

India Exposition Mart Ltd CO-ORGANIZER

Services Export Promotion Council (Under Ministry of Commerce and Industry)


&
India Exposition Mart Ltd

GOVERNMENT MINISTRY SUPPORT

Ministry of Electronics & Information Technology


Ministry of Road Transport & Highways
Ministry of Food Processing Industries
Ministry of Science and Technology
Ministry of Chemicals and Fertilizers
National Small Industries Corporation ( NSIC )

Pollution Control Board,


Assam
TBA TBA TBA TBA

TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA

MAGAZINE PARTNERS

TV CHANNEL PARTNER / SOCIAL MEDIA

TBA TBA TBA TBA

STRATEGIC PARTNERS
INDUSTRY ASSOCIATION, CHAMBER PARTNERS

TBA TBA TBA TBA

SUPPORTING INDUSTRY PARTNERS

TBA TBA
Nestlé Ltd. Godrej Industries Ltd.

SUSTAINABILITY PARTNERS
ELECTRICAL MOBILITY & BATTERY
REFURBISHMENT, BATTERY RECYCLING, OEMS

TBA

GREEN ENERGY, HYDROGEN, BIOGAS AND BIOFUEL, ESG,


CSR, CARBON NEGATIVE

TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA

EDUCATION SUPPORTING PARTNER


RECYCLING SUPPORTING PARTNER

TBA
E-WASTE RECYCLING RECYCLING & ENVIRONMENT INDUSTRY TBA
ASSOCIATION OF INDIA

HANDICRAFT, SPORTS GIFT ITEMS, JUTE, LEATHER,


TEXTILES GARMENTS & HOME FURNISHING

TBA TBA TBA TBA


The Clothing Manufacturers
Association of India

START UP CONCLAVE, STARTUPS FUNDING FROM BANKS,


SIDBI & IPO

TBA TBA

Funding Partners
Banks, PSU’s, SIDBI, IPO & Financial Association

TBA

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