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How is Kerala handling its waste problem?

Why was the Vruthi Campaign Launched?

  • Shift in consumption patterns: Post-liberalisation, Kerala saw a rise in inorganic and non-biodegradable waste due to market-driven products.
  • Urbanisation pressures: Agriculture’s share in GDP fell below 10%, altering traditional waste disposal practices.
  • Public health risks: Issues like dog bites, zoonotic diseases, and worker fatalities (e.g., canal drowning) made waste management urgent.
  • Gap between private hygiene and public cleanliness: Despite individual hygiene awareness, public spaces remained dirty.

Relevance: GS 2(Governance) ,GS 3(Environment and Ecology)

What is the Vruthi’ Campaign?

  • Meaning: ‘Vruthi’ denotes purity of body and mind.
  • Launched: October 2, 2024.
  • Scale: Mobilised ~25,000 people across government and civil society.
  • Successes: Household waste collection coverage rose from 40% to 75% in a year.
  • Core approach: Behavioural change, decentralisation, inclusivity.

Campaign Features and Strategies

  • Local engagement: Haritha Karmasena, schools, artists, voluntary groups involved.
  • Decentralised focus: Promotes localised, adaptable technologies like Black Soldier Fly composting, windrow composting.
  • Technology-neutral: Solutions customised by locality; no one-size-fits-all model.
  • Community-driven: Residents’ collectives, RWAs, schools, enterprises brought into waste governance.

Differences from Swachh Bharat Mission (SBM)

Vruthi / Kerala ModelSwachh Bharat Mission
Bottom-up, people-centricTop-down, bureaucratic model
Behavioural change focusInfrastructure-focused (toilets, plants)
Decentralised, contextual solutionsStandardised supply-driven framework
Technology-neutralOften tech-specific mandates

Decentralised vs. Centralised Waste Management

  • Not binary: Kerala explores a mixed approach, choosing what suits local needs.
  • Successes:
    • Centralised: Guruvayur Municipality.
    • Decentralised: Local composting models.
  • Failures:
    • Centralised: Brahmapuram fire in Kochi due to mismanagement.
  • Challenges: Local self-governments lack technical capacity despite funding increases.

Current Challenges

  • Sustainability of efforts: Momentum largely state-driven — may falter if government focus wanes.
  • Capacity gaps: Local bodies need professionalisation and technical support.
  • Linear waste pattern: Shift needed towards circular economy.
  • Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR): Requires stronger enforcement to reduce burden on public systems.

Path Ahead

  • Embed behavioural change: “My waste, my responsibility” must reach every household and institution.
  • Strengthen local institutions: Schools, RWAs, businesses, and worker collectives should be key partners.
  • Model for India: Kerala’s decentralised, participatory urban sanitation can inspire other states.

May 2025
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