In din of event curbs, BMC meet quietly paves way for ‘pay-by-kilo’ garbage bills for colonies
Bhopal: Bhopal Municipal Corporation (BMC) council meeting on new solid waste rules on Tuesday was dominated by talk of tighter controls on events, but the finer point with the widest public impact went largely unexamined: residential colonies in the city will now be treated as “bulk waste generators” and billed for garbage collection by weight.
BMC corporators spent much of the discussion on provisions that bring even relatively small gatherings under scrutiny. Any event expecting 100 or more people — from concerts and political rallies to birthday parties, engagement ceremonies, farewells and mohalla functions — must be reported to BMC three days in advance.
The rules also mandate fines for dumping or burning waste in the open, including after such events, with organisers held responsible for improper disposal.
What drew less attention is that the Solid Waste Management Rules, 2026 explicitly classify residential colonies and housing societies as bulk waste generators, alongside institutions and commercial establishments.
Under the notified structure, bulk generators will be charged at different per-tonne rates. Currently now, registered some mapped bulk waste generators are paying Rs 921 per ton, according to BMC.
This means RWAs and gated communities will no longer be passive recipients of municipal collection; they will be billed according to the actual weight of waste they send into the BMC system, effectively making residents pay for garbage “by the kilo” at the colony level. Waste will be weighed at transfer stations, and the amount and corresponding charge will reflect in BMC’s integrated bill.
“We are in the process of mapping all bulk generators. IEC camps with RWAs will be undertaken in the near future,” said BMC commissioner, Sanskriti Jain.
New rules will encompass all the city. The exception for now are older colonies which still rely on door-to-door waste collection, those too will be mapped in the long term, according to BMC.
Officials say the civic body expects colonies and institutions to manage as much waste as possible on their own — through composting and on-site processing, with only residual waste handed over to BMC and attracting charges.
Resident groups, however, point out that households produce very different amounts of waste and fear that RWAs will eventually pass on the new bills, raising questions of fairness, transparency in weighing and the support BMC will offer to set up composting systems inside colonies.
“We already pay our RWA a monthly maintenance fee, and now BMC plans to bill the RWA under this ‘pay-as-you-throw’ system. Does that mean the RWA will start charging each household extra for the waste it generates? How will they ensure fairness, when every home produces a different amount of garbage? If I have two pets, for instance, my waste will likely be heavier than that of a neighbour without pets,” said a businessman from a colony on Hoshangabad Road.
Host 100 or More Guests? BMC Now Wants Three Days’ Notice, Waste Fines to Follow
Not just big concerts, exhibitions and political rallies but even birthday parties, engagements, farewells and neighbourhood functions will now come under Bhopal Municipal Corporation’s watch if they expect 100 or more people, with organisers required to inform the civic body three days in advance. Fines will also be imposed for dumping or burning waste in the open, officials said in a presentation on the Solid Waste Management Rules-2026 at a special BMC council meeting on Tuesday.
***
Who Counts as a “Bulk Waste Generator”
Under the new Solid Waste Management Rules, certain buildings and campuses in Bhopal will be treated as Bulk Waste Generators (BWGs) and face pay‑by‑weight garbage billing and stricter waste norms.
Basic eligibility
A building or campus is classified as a Bulk Waste Generator if it meets any of these thresholds:
Built‑up floor area: 20,000 sq.m or more
Water use: 40,000 litres per day or more
Solid waste: 100 kg of waste per day or more
Once it crosses these levels, it is expected to manage part of its waste on‑site and will be billed as a BWG.
Types of Bulk Waste Generators
1. Institutional BWGs
These include: central and state government offices and undertakings, local bodies, PSUs, private companies, schools, colleges, universities, research institutes, other educational institutions, community places, public buildings and similar large institutions.
2. Commercial BWGs
These cover: railway stations, bus depots, airports, ports, industrial units and areas, malls, multiplexes, hotels, hospitals and nursing homes, hostels, auditoriums, exhibition areas, wholesale markets (such as mandis, fish and meat markets), stadiums and sports complexes, community and convention halls, marriage/banquet halls, conference and expo centres, tourist spots, restaurants and food courts, and other large commercial sites.
3. Residential BWGs
These are mainly residential societies and RWAs and other large residential complexes that meet the above floor area, water use or waste generation thresholds.
The rules also mandate fines for dumping or burning waste in the open, including after such events, with organisers held responsible for improper disposal.
What drew less attention is that the Solid Waste Management Rules, 2026 explicitly classify residential colonies and housing societies as bulk waste generators, alongside institutions and commercial establishments.
Under the notified structure, bulk generators will be charged at different per-tonne rates. Currently now, registered some mapped bulk waste generators are paying Rs 921 per ton, according to BMC.
This means RWAs and gated communities will no longer be passive recipients of municipal collection; they will be billed according to the actual weight of waste they send into the BMC system, effectively making residents pay for garbage “by the kilo” at the colony level. Waste will be weighed at transfer stations, and the amount and corresponding charge will reflect in BMC’s integrated bill.
“We are in the process of mapping all bulk generators. IEC camps with RWAs will be undertaken in the near future,” said BMC commissioner, Sanskriti Jain.
Officials say the civic body expects colonies and institutions to manage as much waste as possible on their own — through composting and on-site processing, with only residual waste handed over to BMC and attracting charges.
Resident groups, however, point out that households produce very different amounts of waste and fear that RWAs will eventually pass on the new bills, raising questions of fairness, transparency in weighing and the support BMC will offer to set up composting systems inside colonies.
“We already pay our RWA a monthly maintenance fee, and now BMC plans to bill the RWA under this ‘pay-as-you-throw’ system. Does that mean the RWA will start charging each household extra for the waste it generates? How will they ensure fairness, when every home produces a different amount of garbage? If I have two pets, for instance, my waste will likely be heavier than that of a neighbour without pets,” said a businessman from a colony on Hoshangabad Road.
Host 100 or More Guests? BMC Now Wants Three Days’ Notice, Waste Fines to Follow
Not just big concerts, exhibitions and political rallies but even birthday parties, engagements, farewells and neighbourhood functions will now come under Bhopal Municipal Corporation’s watch if they expect 100 or more people, with organisers required to inform the civic body three days in advance. Fines will also be imposed for dumping or burning waste in the open, officials said in a presentation on the Solid Waste Management Rules-2026 at a special BMC council meeting on Tuesday.
***
Who Counts as a “Bulk Waste Generator”
Under the new Solid Waste Management Rules, certain buildings and campuses in Bhopal will be treated as Bulk Waste Generators (BWGs) and face pay‑by‑weight garbage billing and stricter waste norms.
Basic eligibility
A building or campus is classified as a Bulk Waste Generator if it meets any of these thresholds:
Built‑up floor area: 20,000 sq.m or more
Water use: 40,000 litres per day or more
Solid waste: 100 kg of waste per day or more
Once it crosses these levels, it is expected to manage part of its waste on‑site and will be billed as a BWG.
Types of Bulk Waste Generators
1. Institutional BWGs
These include: central and state government offices and undertakings, local bodies, PSUs, private companies, schools, colleges, universities, research institutes, other educational institutions, community places, public buildings and similar large institutions.
2. Commercial BWGs
These cover: railway stations, bus depots, airports, ports, industrial units and areas, malls, multiplexes, hotels, hospitals and nursing homes, hostels, auditoriums, exhibition areas, wholesale markets (such as mandis, fish and meat markets), stadiums and sports complexes, community and convention halls, marriage/banquet halls, conference and expo centres, tourist spots, restaurants and food courts, and other large commercial sites.
3. Residential BWGs
These are mainly residential societies and RWAs and other large residential complexes that meet the above floor area, water use or waste generation thresholds.
Comments
Be the first to share a thought and become theFirst Voiceof this News Article
end of article
In Bhopal
- MP CM orders scrapping of two-child rule for govt job
- Bhopal Metro cost swells 44% to Rs 10k cr; cabinet clears Rs 3k cr more
- High drama at Bhopal airport as plane with Cong MLAs made to wait for 4 hrs
- MP’s DFA Raisen named among top-16 women’s clubs in India
- Woman abducted, strangled, legs severed to remove silver anklets in Madhya Pradesh
- HC allows pregnant rape survivor to give birth to baby after she refuses MTP
- With monsoon yet to arrive, Upper Lake level drops 1.4 feet in 34 days
Featured In City
- In din of event curbs, BMC meet quietly paves way for ‘pay-by-kilo’ garbage bills for colonies
- 11 students score perfect 100 percentile in MHT-CET PCB
- Birthday cake turns into nightmare as toddler swallows hidden metal pins
- Towering ambitions: Delhi Fire Service looks skyward for solutions
- Bengal ex-minister Ujjal Biswas arrested in ‘tarpaulin misappropriation’ case
- Woman, 75, wheeled to bank on handcart in 42°C sun sparks outrage
- BMC seeks to appoint Forest Development Corporation of Maharashtra to handle compensatory tree plantation for Mumbai Coastal Road (North) and Dahisar-Bhayander Elevated Road projects
Photostories
- Times 'Peddi' star Ram Charan proved to be a family man: 'I don’t want to miss a single moment with my daughter, Klin'
- London's Billionaire Street: 5 most expensive real estate addresses attracting the world's wealthiest buyers
- 5 brain tumour myths that experts wish people would stop believing
- Lewis Hamilton’s luxury sneaker collection:A look at the F1 star’s footwear obsession
- From Aamir Khan to Lalit Modi: 10 famous personalities who fell in love with their long-time friends
- Indian history and mythology to native language: 6 meaningful ways to connect children with indian heritage
- 5 countries where tipping is considered rude
- From 'Om Shanti Om', 'Dear Zindagi' to Yale University: Shah Rukh Khan’s most inspiring quotes that will change your outlook on life
- The best places to retire in India: Affordable, peaceful, and senior-friendly
- 9 mangoes that are not grown in India and what makes them unique
Videos
- Kashmiri Diaspora Stages Massive UK Protests Against Alleged Military Crackdown In PoJK
03:43 Inside TMC Turmoil: MPs Revolt, Leaders Resign and NDA aims at power07:01 Kalyan Banerjee, Kirti Azad Attack TMC Rebels As Party Faces Biggest Split Yet08:11 Why The Centre Lifted Lakshadweep's 47-Year Liquor Ban: Explained06:34 PoK Unrest Deepens: Protesters Allege Crackdown, Casualties And Blackout03:31 TMC Crisis Deepens As CID Probes Alleged Fake Signatures In LoP Selection Case | Watch02:45 India Accuses Pak Of Spreading Disinformation To Cover Up Human Rights Abuses In POK03:07 US Court Strikes Down Trump-Era $100,000 H-1B Visa Fee | Temporary Relief To Indians?03:57 SIPRI 2026: India Overtakes Pak In Nuclear Warheads, Emerges As World’s 5th Largest Military Spender
Hot Picks
Top Trends
Up Next
Follow Us On Social Media