Swachha Nagar
Rural and urban local bodies today are increasingly focused on achieving cleaner, healthier, and more sustainable communities. With the rise of programs such as the Clean Grampanchayat Awards and state-level Zero Waste Village initiatives, Panchayats and Municipal Bodies are expected to demonstrate measurable progress in waste segregation, decentralized processing, and community participation.
Effective wet waste management and scientific composting are at the core of these achievements. Most villages and towns struggle with scattered waste, inconsistent collection, and inadequate processing systems—leading to environmental degradation and loss of public trust. INORA supports local bodies in transforming their waste ecosystem through scalable, low-maintenance, and scientifically designed composting technologies. Our solutions help villages and municipalities move toward full compliance, cleaner surroundings, and recognition as model zero waste communities.
Segregation
Why It’s Difficult & What the Challenge Is
Segregation fails mainly due to low awareness, mixed collection practices, and limited supervision at the household level. In many villages, wet and dry waste get combined during collection or transportation, making processing inefficient and expensive.
What this creates is a system where composting units underperform, dry waste piles up, and the village cannot meet Zero Waste or Clean Grampanchayat Award standards.
Project Sustainability
Why It’s Hard & What the Challenge Is
Waste management projects often struggle to sustain because of irregular operations, lack of trained manpower, equipment downtime, and no structured monitoring. Seasonal staff turnover, insufficient budgets, and absence of scientific processes slow down long-term performance. The challenge is building a system that runs smoothly every day, regardless of manpower changes, with reliable operations, minimal maintenance, and clear accountability.
How INORA Solves These Challenges
Decentralized Waste Management
INORA enables villages to manage waste at the source through home composting, small community composters, and a simple dry waste collection–sorting system.
Our microbial layering technology ensures odor-free composting with minimal effort. This model reduces transportation needs, improves segregation, and supports rapid progress toward Zero Waste Village goals.
Centralized Waste Management
For larger waste volumes, INORA provides centralized composting facilities supported by engineered aeration, microbial processing, and structured operations.
Integrated Material Recovery Facilities (MRFs) ensure scientific dry waste sorting and recycling. This scalable system delivers consistent performance, regulatory compliance, and strong outcomes for Clean Grampanchayat Awards.
Funding Channels for Grampanchayats
Finance Commission Funds
Allocated annually for strengthening basic services, these funds can be used for waste collection systems, composting units, and sanitation improvements.
Solid Waste Management (SWM) Funds Dedicated to establishing and operating waste processing systems, including home composting, community composters, and waste handling equipment.
MLA Funds
MLAs can support infrastructure gaps such as composting sheds, segregation points, and machinery required for decentralized processing.
Gram Nidhi
Flexible village-level funds used for essential local development works; ideal for gap-filling in waste management projects and small equipment purchases.
CSR Support
Corporates fund infrastructure, composting systems, MRFs, awareness programs, and
capacity building, enabling village-wide transitions to Zero Waste models.