World Menstrual Hygiene Day 2023 Managing used sanitary pads: An urgent need : CSE

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Date: May 28, 2023 | 2.30 PM IST | Platform: Zoom

The Centre for Science and Environment (CSE) is a public interest research and advocacy organisation based in New Delhi. CSE researches into, lobbies for and communicates the urgency of development that is both sustainable and equitable.

The scenario today demands using knowledge to bring about change. In other words, working India’s democracy. This is what we aim to do.The challenge, we see, is two-pronged. On the one hand, millions live within a biomass based subsistence economy, at the margins of survival.

The environment is their only natural asset. But a degraded environment means stress on land, water and forest resources for survival. It means increasing destitution and poverty. Here, opportunity to bring about change is enormous.But it will need a commitment to reform – structural reform- in the way we do business with local communities.

On the other hand, rapid industrialization is throwing up new problems: growing toxification and a costly disease burden. The answers will be in reinventing the growth model of the Western world for ourselves, so that we can leapfrog technology choices and find new ways of building wealth that will not cost us the earth.

Our aim is to raise these concerns, participate in seeking answers and in pushing for answers, transforming these into policy and so practice. We do this through our research and by communicating our understanding through our publications.

We call this knowledge-based activism. We hope we will make a difference.

Sanitary waste disposal is becoming an alarming problem in India. Much of it is becauseof disposable sanitary napkins and the plastic used in them is non-bio-degradable in nature and can lead to short-term and long-term health and environmental hazards. The impact is more pronounced because of the unorganised and informal ways of municipal solid waste management including poor segregation, low community collection, lack of sufficient disposal and transportation networks in cities and villages and limited infrastructure for scientific disposal.

In addition, one major concern with managing sanitary waste has always been its categorisation — whether it is biomedical or municipal solid waste. There is an apparent overlapping of two regulations (Solid Waste Management Rules 2016 and Biomedical Waste Management Rules 2016) which makes it even more complicated to manage used sanitary pads in a scientific manner.

Centre for Science and Environment (CSE) has been working extensively on policy and implementation with regard to different components of municipal solid waste,including sanitary waste,at the regional, national and global levels. As part of its ongoing campaign, CSE invites you to its latest lecture in the Practitioner’s Knowledge Building Series – on why the management of used/soiled sanitary pads must be addressed urgently.

NOTEThis master classis free.Waste management practitioners, officials from Central and state urban departments and municipalities, urban and town planners, NGO representatives, CBOs, and anyone interested in the subject are welcome. All those who register will receive an automatic confirmation. However, we request you to register yourself at the earliest and reach out to us in case of any queries.

For more details, please contact:

Richa Singh
Email: richa.singh@cseindia.org
Mobile: +91 9920658638

Register⬇️
https://lnkd.in/d4Y29GjA

Find out who is on the panel⬇️
https://lnkd.in/daMtMAxk

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