News Brief

Karnataka To Train 18,000 Women Self Help Group Members On Solid Waste Management, Solar Energy Utilisation In Rural Areas

Swarajya Staff

Nov 09, 2021, 12:58 PM | Updated 12:58 PM IST


(Pic Via PIB Website)
(Pic Via PIB Website)

The Bengaluru-based Mahatma Gandhi Institute of Rural Energy and Development (MGIRED), in collaboration with the Department of Rural Development and Panchayat Raj, the Department of Rural Drinking Water and Sanitation, and the National Rural Livelihood Mission (NRLM), is training 18,000 rural women from Karnataka's SHGs (Self Help Groups) in various aspects such as solid waste management and solar energy utilisation in rural areas, an official statement said on Tuesday (9 November).

These women will be engaged as SwachhaKarmikas by their local Gram Panchayats to carry out solid waste management duties like daily waste collection, waste segregation, Swaccha Vahini driving, and so on, the Ministry of Jal Shakti said in a statement.

The goal of the programme, which consists of five days of classroom training and exposure trips, is to provide SHG members with the knowledge and skills necessary to efficiently administer Swaccha Sankeerna as a business module and to make the SWM unit self-sustaining, hence providing a source of financial assistance for SHG members, the ministry said.

According to Parameswar Hegde, who is director of Implementation Support Activities (ISA) at Karnataka's Rural Drinking Water and Sanitisation Department (RDWSD), the classroom training that will be offered in all 30 districts this fiscal year would benefit 18,000 rural women, providing them with an alternative source of income.

The programme is free of charge and includes travel, boarding, and accommodation for three women from each of the Gram Panchayats in Karnataka. This year, 600 batches will be covered with 30 women in each batch, with each batch costing between Rs. 70,000 and Rs 1 lakh, the ministry said.

SHG members will learn about renewable energy sources, solid waste management, different composting technologies for wet waste, the idea of bio gas for managing biodegradable waste, and the importance of menstrual health and its management after the training.

The trained members are expected to carry out duties like as waste segregation, wet waste composting, and biogas unit management at their respective gram panchayats, which they learned during practical demonstrations.

Further, MoUs will be signed with the local GPs for the trained women to be absorbed into the GPLF (Gram Panchayat Level Federation), the ministry said.


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