News
Pattaya’s waste revolution: MOI Waste Bank Week
The Waste Bank event on MOI Waste Bank Week in Wat Chong Lom Temple Community in Pattaya symbolized the setting of the waste bank by local government agencies.
Although this eco-friendly drive led by Chonburi Provincial Administration with simultaneous opening of recycle-bank on January 1st was the most significant, there was some individual actions marked out by specific households.
Under the umbrella of Pattaya’s Natural Resources and Environment Office, on March 25, the main objective was to not only promulgate the waste management law enacted by the Ministry of Interior but also ensured implementation of the guidelines which allows only biodegradable waste to be burnt.
Celebrating Pattaya’s Waste Bank Initiative
A fluid of officials, managers and citizens only concerned about the figures along with the readers who stood there. It was not only a way to celebrate but included a touching, honorary motion that represented the joint efforts had been put toward setting up waste banks in Pattaya.
It’s the single resolve of the city run by “Pattaya Mail” that the city is the symbol of proactive ecological governance, fighting the problem of waste pollution.
As the city continues to lead the charge towards a greener future, the MOI Waste Bank Week heralds a new era of sustainability and community-driven change.
In related news, to combat the Thai capital’s mounting garbage crisis, the Bangkok Metropolitan Administration (BMA) is rolling out two cutting-edge waste-to-energy plants to revolutionise waste management by 2026. BMA permanent secretary Wanthanee Wattana voiced unwavering confidence in the timely completion of these game-changing facilities.
“Construction progressing at Nong Khaem, On Nut garbage disposal centers. Privy Councillor Palakorn leads eco-power plant groundwork.”
Wattana revealed that construction is well underway at the Nong Khaem and On Nut garbage disposal centres, with Privy Councillor Palakorn Suwanrath spearheading the ceremonial groundwork for one of these eco-innovative power plants on March 12.
In other news, in a groundbreaking discovery that could change the game for sustainability, a team of scientists from King Mongkut’s University of Technology Thonburi (KMUTT) unlocked the secret to transforming food leftovers into a fuel rivalling low-grade coal.
A team of researchers from KMUTT led by Dr Trairat Muangthong-on has devised a pioneering technique for converting two types of food waste into a fuel comparable to low-grade coal, heralding a new era of sustainability.