Waste Segregation: One Bin for Each, One Step Toward a Cleaner Future
Urbanization and fast-paced lifestyles have increased the amount of waste generated every day. But often, all of it gets dumped into one bin—making recycling difficult and leading to harmful effects on the environment. The solution? Segregation at source.
By separating waste into categories and disposing of them in the right bins, we not only make recycling possible but also reduce pollution and protect public health.
Why Segregation Matters
When waste is properly divided, it can be reused, recycled, or safely disposed of without harming the environment. Municipal bodies, too, can handle collection more effectively, making cities cleaner and greener.
Types of Waste and Their Bins
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Wet Waste (Green Bin): Includes leftover food, vegetable peels, fruit waste, garden waste. This can be composted into organic manure.
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Dry Waste (Blue Bin): Paper, cardboard, plastics, glass, and other recyclable items. These can be sent to recycling plants.
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Plastic Waste (Red Bin): Non-recyclable plastics, wrappers, and certain packaging materials. Proper segregation ensures safe disposal.
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E-Waste (Black Bin): Batteries, electronic items, chargers, and electrical waste. These are hazardous and must be handled carefully.
Small Steps, Big Impact
Segregating waste may seem like a small task at home, but collectively it creates massive change. Clean surroundings, reduced landfill waste, efficient recycling, and healthier communities are all benefits of this simple habit.
🌱 Remember: One household, one small change, one cleaner planet. 🌍
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