Environmental Compliance

Waste Management Compliance

Regulatory compliance for hazardous waste, biomedical waste, and solid waste management under Central Pollution Control Board and State PCB regulations.

Service Overview

Waste management compliance in India covers multiple regulatory frameworks: Hazardous and Other Wastes (Management and Transboundary Movement) Rules 2016, Bio-Medical Waste Management Rules 2016, Solid Waste Management Rules 2016, and Construction & Demolition Waste Management Rules 2016.

Every organization that generates regulated waste categories must obtain authorization from their State Pollution Control Board, maintain waste generation records, arrange for proper treatment and disposal through authorized operators, and file annual returns.

MedRegX India provides comprehensive waste management compliance services — from waste characterization and authorization applications to waste management plan development, operator identification, and regulatory compliance monitoring.

Waste category identification and classification
Hazardous waste authorization from SPCB
Bio-medical waste authorization for healthcare facilities
Waste management plan development
Authorized disposal operator identification
Annual return filing to SPCB
Site inspection and compliance audit support
Waste minimization program development

Key Takeaways

  • Any unit that generates hazardous or bio-medical waste needs an authorisation from the State Pollution Control Board before it operates.
  • Authorisation is granted under waste-specific rules — Hazardous & Other Wastes Rules, Bio-Medical Waste Rules — each with its own forms and conditions.
  • You must dispose of waste only through authorised facilities (TSDFs, CBWTFs) and keep an auditable trail of every movement.
  • Annual returns and manifests are mandatory — a gap in the paper trail is one of the most common findings.
  • Waste authorisation sits alongside PCB consent and EPR — they are separate obligations that must all be in place.

Authorisation Is About Proving Where the Waste Goes

Waste-management compliance is fundamentally about traceability: the regulator wants to know that every stream of hazardous or bio-medical waste your unit generates is handled and disposed of through an authorised route, and that you can prove it. A generator must obtain authorisation from the State Pollution Control Board, declare the categories and quantities of waste produced, and tie each stream to an authorised treatment, storage and disposal facility (TSDF) or, for medical waste, a common bio-medical waste treatment facility (CBWTF). Sending waste to an unauthorised handler — or being unable to document where it went — is treated as seriously as not treating it at all.

The applicable rules depend on what you generate. Manufacturing units fall under the Hazardous and Other Wastes (Management and Transboundary Movement) Rules; hospitals, clinics and labs fall under the Bio-Medical Waste Management Rules; and specific streams like e-waste, plastic and batteries carry their own regimes. Each has distinct authorisation forms, storage conditions, labelling and record-keeping requirements. We identify every waste stream your operation produces and the exact authorisation each one needs, so nothing is left uncovered.

  • SPCB authorisation covering each hazardous / bio-medical waste stream.
  • Tie-ups with authorised TSDF / CBWTF disposal facilities.
  • Manifests and movement documents for every consignment.
  • Compliant on-site storage, labelling and segregation.

The Paper Trail That Keeps You Compliant

Most waste-management penalties are not for mishandling waste but for failing to document it. The rules require manifests for each movement of waste, records of quantities generated and disposed, and annual returns filed with the Pollution Control Board. When an inspector arrives, the question is rarely whether waste is being disposed of, but whether the records reconcile — do the quantities generated, stored and sent for disposal add up, and is every consignment accounted for. A gap in that trail is a finding even when the underlying handling is sound.

We set up the record-keeping so it holds: a waste-management plan that matches your actual operation, manifest and register systems that staff can realistically maintain, and a calendar for the annual returns and renewals that are easy to miss. Because waste authorisation, Pollution Control Board consent (CTE/CTO) and EPR registration are separate obligations that often apply to the same unit at once, we coordinate them together so a business meets all of its environmental responsibilities as one coherent programme rather than discovering a missing piece during an inspection.

Required Documentation

Industry/facility registration documents
Waste generation data (type, quantity, frequency)
Current SPCB consent documents
Existing waste disposal contracts
Site plan showing waste storage areas
Staff training records for waste handling
Previous year annual returns (if applicable)

"Accurate documentation is 70% of the battle. Our experts pre-audit every file before submission."

Our Delivery Workflow

01

Waste Audit

Conduct comprehensive waste audit to identify all waste streams, quantities, and applicable regulatory categories.

02

Authorization Application

Prepare and submit hazardous/bio-medical waste authorization application to SPCB with complete documentation.

03

Compliance Plan

Develop a waste management plan, identify authorized treatment/disposal facilities, and establish tracking systems.

04

Annual Compliance

Manage annual returns, track waste movement documents, and ensure ongoing compliance with waste management rules.

FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

Have questions? Find direct, humanized answers about the regulatory approvals and timelines.

Under the Hazardous Waste Management Rules, any business generating, storing, or treating hazardous waste must obtain SPCB Authorization under Form 1 and enter disposal contracts with TSDF operators. Non-compliance attracts criminal liability.
Any healthcare facility — hospitals, clinics, diagnostic labs, blood banks, veterinary institutions — that generates bio-medical waste is required to obtain BMW authorization from the SPCB, covering segregation, storage, transportation, treatment, and disposal per BMW Rules 2016.
Hazardous waste is classified into 16 categories under the Hazardous Waste Management Rules based on toxicity, ignitability, corrosivity, and reactivity. Chemical residues, spent solvents, paint sludge, and heavy metal-containing effluents are common examples from manufacturing industries.
A TSDF (Treatment, Storage, and Disposal Facility) is an SPCB-authorized facility for final treatment and disposal of hazardous waste. All hazardous waste generators must sign a valid disposal contract with a licensed TSDF and maintain waste manifests (Form 10) for every consignment dispatched.

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