Source:
https://www.thebetterindia.com/204070/these-chennai-engineers-will-pay-you-for-your-scrap-gift-you-a-sapling/
https://www.thebetterindia.com/204070/these-chennai-engineers-will-pay-you-for-your-scrap-gift-you-a-sapling/
“Instead of
allowing scrap waste to land up in a landfill, we thought why not start a
business around it,” say the five engineering graduates who call themselves the
‘trashmen’ of #Chennai! #CleanIndia
Developed by Trashman Green Technology, a Chennai-based startup, the Trashman
app, has garnered over 5000 downloads and 1500 customers
since July, and is helping residents responsibly dispose of their garbage.
Started by Santharam Sathyamoorthy and Udhaya Kumar—two mechanical
engineering graduates—the offline scrap waste collection service turned into a
full-fledged GST-registered MSME with a user-friendly app when three other
college mates Vedha Vijay, Shiju Kingsly and Diwaker Perumal joined the team.
Users of the app can choose the time and place for scrap pick up.
The location is automatically detected, and all they need to do is enter
the flat or door number, and one of Trashman’s executives will come to collect
the scrap and pay up according to its type and weight.
“The app is extremely user-friendly. As soon as you log in, it
automatically picks up your home address. Once you click on your choice of
scrap, you’re asked your door number, and an executive will be assigned to you
to collect the trash,” says Vedha Vijay, speaking to The Better India.
At present, the service extends to Tambaram, Hastinapuram, Chromepet,
Mudichur, Selaiyur, Perungalathur, Alapakkam Sanatorium, Perumbakkam areas. “We
will soon expand to Old Mahabalipuram Road (OMR) and Kelambakkam, and the
eventual aim to extend this service all over Chennai,” he adds.
Everything from plastic waste, cardboard boxes, kitchen utensils,
electric home appliances to batteries is collected by the team to ensure that
none of these materials ends up in a landfill.
The going rate for each category of scrap is clearly mentioned in the app
and the collection executives pay users accordingly. Aside from some money,
users also receive a sapling as a reward for adopting responsible waste
management practices.
“All category of
recyclable dry waste is collected with cash payment to the customer for
example, paper waste, we pay Rs 8 per kg. For cardboard, it is Rs 4 per kg,
Once the scrap waste is collected, it is taken down to a warehouse in
Irumbuliyur, where it is appropriately segregated based on the category of the
trash and it is sold to the recycling traders in Kundrathur and
Thirumudivakkam,” says Udhaya.
From there, the waste is sent to different recycling traders in the city.
“Instead of allowing it to land up in a landfill, we thought why not start a
business around it and ensure that this doesn’t happen by collecting it from
their doorstep and help it along the recycling process,” says Vijay to The
Better India.
“Right now, we have not tied up with any entity or government body. The
future plan is to start a biogas plant that can convert organic waste into
electrical energy. We wish to make Chennai a waste-free city,” says Diwaker.
Why have these engineering students targeted waste collection at home?
According to the folks at Trashman, more than 60% of the waste generated
in the city comes from households. This figure comes from a survey they
conducted before launching the app.