We are Hyderabad based Waste Management Company, focusing on well differentiated technology to provide effective waste management systems. Peepal Waste Managers design, build and operate customized waste management systems that generate additional benefits for its customers. Our practical approach optimizes the resources to contribute to the best waste management solutions for domestic and institutional clients.
Peepal aims to extract maximum energy from the minimum waste.We improve the profitability of owners and city planners by lower capital investments and operating costs to deal with the real causes of environmental pollution. Peepal journey started in the year 2012. Peepal developed various models for biomethanation, composting and other effective waste management techniques. With a proven expertise in the field of Waste Management, Peepal provides End-to-End Solutions to various clients/ NGOs/organizations through its varied Products and Consulting, Installation, Operations and Maintenance services.
1) To collect the garbage by installing Bins.
2) To arrange staff to collect the garbage.
3) To arrange fleet of vehicles to shift the bins to land-fill depos
4) To get the garbage segregated by engaing staff.
5) To plan for disposal of segregated garbage.
Waste management is all the activities and actions required to manage waste from its inception to its final disposal. This includes amongst other things, collection, transport, treatment and disposal of waste together with monitoring and regulation. It also encompasses the legal and regulatory framework that relates to waste management encompassing guidance on recycling etc.
The term normally relates to all kinds of waste, whether generated during the extraction of raw materials, the processing of raw materials into intermediate and final products, the consumption of final products, or other human activities,
[1] including municipal (residential, institutional, commercial), agricultural, and social (health care, household hazardous waste, sewage sludge).
[2] Waste management is intended to reduce adverse effects of waste on health, the environment or aesthetics.
The waste hierarchy refers to the "3 Rs" reduce, reuse and recycle, which classify waste management strategies according to their desirability in terms of waste minimisation. The waste hierarchy remains the cornerstone of most waste minimisation strategies. The aim of the waste hierarchy is to extract the maximum practical benefits from products and to generate the minimum amount of waste; see: resource recovery.The waste hierarchy is represented as a pyramid because the basic premise is for policy to take action first and prevent the generation of waste. The next step or preferred action is to reduce the generation of waste i.e. by re-use. The next is recycling which would include composting. Following this step is material recovery and waste-to-energy. Energy can be recovered from processes i.e. landfill and combustion, at this level of the hierarchy. The final action is disposal, in landfills or through incineration without energy recovery. This last step is the final resort for waste which has not been prevented, diverted or recovered.The waste hierarchy represents the progression of a product or material through the sequential stages of the pyramid of waste management. The hierarchy represents the latter parts of the life-cycle for each product.
The life-cycle begins with design, then proceeds through manufacture, distribution, use and then follows through the waste hierarchy's stages of reduce, reuse and recycle. Each of the above stages of the life-cycle offers opportunities for policy intervention, to rethink the need for the product, to redesign to minimize waste potential, to extend its use.[4][page needed] The key behind the life-cycle of a product is to optimize the use of the world's limited resources by avoiding the unnecessary generation of waste.
Resource efficiency reflects the understanding that current, global, economic growth and development can not be sustained with the current production and consumption patterns. Globally, we are extracting more resources to produce goods than the planet can replenish.[4][page needed] Resource efficiency is the reduction of the environmental impact from the production and consumption of these goods, from final raw material extraction to last use and disposal. This process of resource efficiency can address sustainability.
The Polluter pays principle is a principle where the polluting party pays for the impact caused to the environment. With respect to waste management, this generally refers to the requirement for a waste generator to pay for appropriate disposal of the unrecoverable material.
Townships
Huge Complexes & Societies
Resorts & Hotels
Restaurants & Fast food centres
Shopping Malls
Offices & Corporate Houses SEZs
Factories
Industrial canteens
Farms & Agricultural industries
Gardens, Parks & Play Areas
Public Toilets