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Cleaner Cities Start At Home: 5 Simple Waste Segregation Habits That Matter

Cleaner Cities Start At Home: 5 Simple Waste Segregation Habits That Matter

News183 days ago
Last Updated:
Like building wealth, sustainability thrives on small, consistent action. A single house using a three-bin system for a year can divert over half a tonne of waste from landfills.
Every year, World Environment Day serves as a calendar nudge, like a Facebook birthday reminder, to momentarily reflect on our planet before slipping back into business as usual. But this year's theme, plastic pollution, isn't something we can afford to forget. Our landfills, much like unpaid credit card bills, are quietly collecting interest, now in the form of microplastics found in our water, food, and even air.
According to the Scaling Our Waste Mountains Report (Godrej Consumer Products & Dasra, 2023), a staggering 70–80% of urban waste in India is unsegregated, meaning most of it can't be recycled and ends up in landfills. This also puts millions of waste workers at risk, exposing them to hazardous waste without protection. The good news? A major part of the solution begins right at home.
1. Use the Three-Bin Method
2. Compost Your Kitchen Waste
Food waste makes up over half of an urban Indian dustbin. When dumped, it releases methane and pollutes groundwater. But composting transforms it into nutrient-rich fertiliser for your garden or terrace farm.
3. Rinse Before You Recycle
Dry waste like paper and plastic holds value, but only if it's clean and uncontaminated. A quick rinse of plastic containers ensures higher resale and recovery rates. Dirty recyclables, on the other hand, end up in landfills. Consider it the environmental equivalent of pruning underperforming assets from your investment portfolio.
4. Don't Mix Your Waste Portfolio
When you mix waste, you destroy its value. It disrupts processing, increases landfill load, and puts over three million informal workers, many without gloves or safety gear, at health risk. Mixed waste isn't just a processing issue; it's an ethical one.
5. Support the People Behind the Process
India's informal waste-pickers recover up to 30% of all recyclables, yet lack formal recognition or resources. Cities like Pune, through the SWaCH model, have shown that integrating these workers improves both waste recovery and livelihoods. Supporting local collection drives and cooperative models is a direct investment in environmental and social equity.
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First Published:
August 02, 2025, 12:43 IST
Disclaimer: Comments reflect users' views, not News18's. Please keep discussions respectful and constructive. Abusive, defamatory, or illegal comments will be removed. News18 may disable any comment at its discretion. By posting, you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.
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