Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
10508263 Resources, Conservation and Recycling 2005 12 Pages PDF
Abstract
In an assessment study conducted in 2001, key information on the Mirpur composting scheme was collected. This includes a description of the technical and operational aspects of the composting scheme (site-layout, process steps, mass flows, monitoring of physical and chemical parameters), the evaluation of financial parameters, and the description of the compost marketing strategy. The case study shows a rare successful decentralised collection and composting scheme in a large city of the developing world. Essential for acceptance by consumers was that the composting scheme was able to get formal approval from the Bangladesh Agriculture Research Council on the use of the compost product for agricultural purposes as well as policy support by the Ministry of Agriculture. Financial success of the scheme is based on the fact that large bulk buyers of compost were found. The compost product is mainly sold to fertiliser producing companies which blend the compost with additives/nutrients to suit different customers. Sales of the products are then done through existing agricultural extension services and retail networks of these companies. Thus the compost marketing strategy of the composting schemes is based on letting others do the individual marketing of the compost. The case of Mirpur shows that composting can be a good alternative to conventional solid waste management options, reducing the amount of waste to be transported and dumped and producing a valuable raw material for fertilisers.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Energy Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment
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