University of Toronto India Foundation
The amount of municipal solid waste produced by cities in India already exceeds 150,000 metric tons per day and is expected to rise over 300,000 metric tons by 2047. Historically, the collection and disposal of waste has been done through landfilling but many of these landfills have exceeded their capacity. As a result, many innovative cities are developing complete changes to the way they operate their waste management systems through improved collection practices, resource recovery options, community involvement, and environmental stewardship. All of these different approaches to transform the existing method of managing waste will show through time that the sustainable waste management systems in India will be attainable and successful.
In India, cities are beginning to change the way they dispose of waste by shifting from traditional means of waste management (collect and throw away) to more sustainable processes that recapture the value of waste materials after use. This shift requires a multi-faceted approach that includes technological advancement, policy change, social behaviour change, and public participation working together. The University of Toronto’s India Foundation and other organizations will support this effort by providing research documentation, piloting new waste management paradigms, and fostering innovative ideas related to waste management.
Modern waste management in India increasingly incorporates technologies converting waste into resources. Startups supported through the UofT India Foundation’s Techtonic Challenge develop innovations exemplifying this transformation:
Angirus manufactures bricks from plastic and construction waste, diverting materials from landfills while creating superior building products. Cities implementing construction waste segregation policies ensure feedstock availability for such innovations. Bangalore and other metros now require construction waste recycling, creating demand for technologies converting this waste stream.
RecycleX With its cement-free concrete made from industrial byproducts, is emitting less carbon and producing higher-quality products because of this innovation. Additionally, as municipalities move toward using more sustainable materials in their construction projects, there will be new opportunities for innovative products that were previously not commercially viable due to lack of supportive procurement policies.
Carbon Craft Design creates carbon-negative building materials from captured CO2 and waste, addressing both climate and disposal challenges simultaneously. These innovations demonstrate how waste management in India evolves from burden elimination toward resource valorization.
Technology alone proves insufficient without community engagement. Cities recognizing informal waste workers’ essential contributions increasingly formalize and support their roles rather than attempting to eliminate them. SWaCH, the waste-picker cooperative in Pune documented through research supported by the University of Toronto India Foundation, demonstrates this model’s viability.
SWaCH members collect, segregate, and process waste while receiving fair compensation, social security benefits, and formal recognition. The cooperative’s success shows that waste management in India improves when informal sector workers transition from exploited to respected, fairly compensated professionals. Other cities, including Bengaluru and Mumbai, are developing similar models recognizing waste pickers’ essential environmental services.
Cities implementing source segregation at household levels, separating wet and dry waste before collection, reduce processing burdens on facilities while enabling more efficient material recovery. When citizens participate in segregation, they develop environmental awareness while improving waste management system effectiveness.
Progressive cities are investing in comprehensive waste management in India infrastructure beyond basic landfills:
Segregation at Source: Implementing bin systems enabling wet-dry-hazardous waste separation from collection point, improving downstream processing efficiency.
Transfer Stations: Establishing intermediate facilities where waste is sorted, compressed, and consolidated for efficient transport to processing facilities, reducing collection vehicle trips and emissions.
Processing Facilities: Developing composting plants converting organic waste to fertilizer, material recovery facilities extracting valuable materials from mixed waste, and waste-to-energy facilities for non-recyclable waste.
Scientific Landfills: Implementing modern landfill practices including leachate management, methane capture, and environmental monitoring, addressing environmental impacts of necessary disposal.
Pune, Surat, and Hyderabad exemplify cities implementing integrated systems combining these infrastructure components. Their experiences demonstrate that systematic improvement requires capital investment, institutional coordination, and sustained political commitment.
Effective waste management in India requires supportive policies including:
Extended Producer Responsibility: Holding manufacturers accountable for product end-of-life management incentivizes designing for recyclability and supporting recovery systems.
Waste Segregation Mandates: Requiring source segregation reduces contamination, enables efficient material recovery, and builds citizen participation.
Green Procurement: Government and corporate purchasing preferences for sustainable materials create demand for waste-derived products, making waste conversion economically viable.
Landfill Bans: Prohibiting specific materials from landfills, construction waste, organic matter, plastics, forces development of alternative processing infrastructure.
Cities like Bengaluru and Pune implement such policies with varying success, demonstrating that policy frameworks alone prove insufficient without complementary infrastructure, enforcement, and public participation.
The UofT India Foundation supports research examining what factors enable successful waste management in India transitions. Studies investigate behavioral dimensions influencing citizen participation, economic models for waste service financing, governance structures facilitating informal-formal integration, and technological appropriateness for different city contexts.
This research evidence helps municipalities avoid costly failures and adopt approaches proven effective in similar contexts. The foundation’s documentation of SWaCH’s cooperative model provides templates for other cities exploring formalization pathways.
Despite progress, waste management in India faces substantial challenges. Rapid waste generation growth outpaces infrastructure development. Financial constraints limit municipal investment capacity. Resistance from some communities to change established practices slows behavioral transitions. Technical capacity gaps in operations and maintenance affect facility effectiveness.
Yet these challenges present opportunities for continued innovation and improvement. Organizations like University of Toronto India supporting both technological development and systemic research strengthen foundations for accelerated progress.
The Indian cities are changing their ways of working with waste away from throwing waste away to reusing it, so that by going through technology, rethinking laws, including the public in the process, building the right facilities, and maintaining a long-term plan, they can become environmentally cleaner places. With increasing amounts of waste being generated in India each day, there is an increasing urgency for these cities to implement these changes in the near future. The next steps have been identified, and the cities that have proven to be using research and new ideas as well as working with each other globally will demonstrate to other nations that implementing new waste disposal solutions by reusing and recycling will produce environmentally better places.
Q: How can individual citizens contribute to better waste management in India?
A: The way you can participate is through active participation in source segregation and reducing our overall waste, through conscious consumption, supporting communities of waste pickers, and advocating for improvements in municipal waste management. When you segregate your household waste appropriately, you significantly increase municipal systems’ efficiency while improving environmental awareness.
Q: What role do startups play in waste management in India improvements?
A: Another example of this is with Startups that create technologies to convert waste into usable resources, construction materials, energy, and water treatment solutions. U of T Canada Foundation has supported innovative new ventures including Angirus, RecycleX, and Carbon Craft, which illustrates how innovation changes the economic aspect of waste management (finding ways to recover resources profitably rather than just environmentally).
Q: Why is formalizing waste picker communities important?
A: Waste pickers provide essential environmental services, often without fair compensation or legal recognition. Formalization, as exemplified by SWaCH in Pune, ensures decent working conditions, provides social security, and builds dignity. Simultaneously, formalized systems operate more efficiently than informal alternatives.
Q: What’s the connection between waste management improvements and climate action?
A: Better waste management creates less methane emissions from landfills, diverts waste from energy-consuming incinerators, allows for recycling and recovering materials with less reliance on virgin resources and supports transitions to a Circular Economy. Effective waste management in India has a huge impact on climate adaptation.
Q: How can cities finance necessary waste management infrastructure investments?
A: Diversified approaches including improved tax collection, user fees, green bonds, corporate partnerships, government transfers, and innovative financing models all contribute. Cities successfully improving waste management in India typically combine multiple funding sources rather than relying on single mechanisms.