A view of the landfill in Puducherry. Representational image. File
| Photo Credit: S.S. Kumar
The Puducherry Pollution Control Committee (PPCC) has directed establishments across the Union Territory generating large quantities of solid waste to obtain a mandatory Extended Bulk Waste Generator (BWG) Certificate from the respective urban local bodies and Commune Panchayats.
The move comes in the wake of the notification of the revised Solid Waste Management (SWM) Rules 2026 that has come into effect from April 1, 2026.
In its advisory, the PPCC has directed all eligible Bulk Waste Generators to register without delay on the Central Pollution Control Board (CPCB) web portal at https://swm.cpcb.gov.in, submit required details, pay the prescribed fee, and secure the certificate from the concerned local authority.
Criteria
As per the Rules, any entity meeting at least one of the specified criteria will be classified as a Bulk Waste Generator (BWG). The criteria include a building with a floor area of 20,000 square metres or above, water consumption of 40,000 litres per day or more, or solid waste generation of 100 kilograms per day or more.
The definition covers government institutions, commercial establishments, industrial units, hotels, hospitals, educational institutions, wholesale markets, sports complexes, restaurants, community and conference halls, marriage and banquet halls, apartment complexes, and tourist destinations.
All eligible establishments must complete online registration on the CPCB portal, furnish necessary information, and remit the prescribed fee. The application is then forwarded to the concerned Municipality or Commune Panchayat for verification and issuance of the BWG Certificate.
Failure to comply may attract Environmental Compensation, penal action, and even disconnection of power supply under the provisions of the Environment (Protection) Act, 1986, and the Solid Waste Management Rules, 2026.
According to N. Ramesh, Member Secretary of PPCC, “The new SWM Rules, which came into force on April 1, 2026, mark a significant shift toward scientific waste segregation, on-site processing of wet waste, and channelisation of dry waste to authorised recyclers. The rules also emphasise decentralised waste processing, door-to-door collection of segregated waste, and the integration of informal waste pickers into the formal recycling value chain.”
Published – July 13, 2026 04:27 pm IST
