ESG strategies that ignore waste systems are incomplete and misleading. Here’s why waste must sit at the core of ESG, EPR compliance, and sustainability governance. Introduction: The ESG Blind Spot No One Talks About ESG has become the dominant language of sustainability. Boards discuss it. Investors demand it. Companies report it. Yet one critical element is consistently treated as an afterthought: Waste. In most ESG strategies, waste appears as a checklist item — recycling percentages, diversion rates, or a short paragraph buried inside sustainability reports. Rarely is it treated as a core system that determines environmental impact, social outcomes, and governance credibility . That omission is not accidental. It’s systemic. And it’s why ESG without a waste strategy is incomplete sustainability . ESG Looks Holistic — Until You Examine the Waste Layer On paper, ESG covers everything: Environmental: emissions, resources, pollution Social: labor, safety, c...
A waste audit is the foundation of effective solid waste management, yet it remains one of the most overlooked tools in India. While municipalities invest in infrastructure and policies, the absence of structured waste audits continues to weaken implementation. This article explains what a waste audit truly is, why it matters, and how it enables practical, compliant, and financially sustainable waste management systems. Introduction: The Real Problem Is Not Money India does not lack waste management rules. India does not even lack funding in many cases. What India lacks is ground-level diagnosis . Across municipalities, town committees, institutions, and facilities, waste management systems are often designed without fully understanding how waste is actually generated, handled, and moved. As a result, even well-intended initiatives struggle to deliver outcomes. This gap between policy and practice is exactly where a waste audit becomes critical. A waste audit is not a formality. ...