Indian municipal solid waste production exceeds 55 million tonnes per year, with a five percent yearly growth. Municipal solid waste has several environmental benefits, making it a promising feedstock for large-scale energy production. For energy utilisation, consider pelletising municipal solid waste with or without a binder. The volume of municipal solid trash created causes deposition, degradation, and maintenance concerns. India is increasing rapidly in population and urbanisation. This has consistently increased municipal solid trash production. The Planning Commission of India reports that 51% of Indian municipal solid trash is organic. Yard debris and food waste from restaurants, hotels and retail stores make up most of it. Since one-third of food is wasted, it's a major concern. One billion and three hundred thousand tonnes of food waste are produced worldwide. Municipal trash is dumped at open dumps in India. Open dumping is the least recommended method of solid waste management because it emits greenhouse gases and produces foul odours, flies, and rats, which spread disease and cause complaints in nearby residential areas. The spilt leachate may also affect nearby ground and surface waterways. Open dumps also need land, which is scarce in densely populated India. This is a major issue in India because landfills are open dumping sites without engineering solutions. Compared to anaerobic digestion and biomass gasification, pelletisation is a better organic waste treatment. Pelletisation is easy if wastes are categorised. After separation, garbage is treated and turned into pellets for burning. This study examines sixteen samples for calorific value, moisture, ash, and CHNS ratio. Energy crops, agricultural trash, forestry waste, and municipal garbage are samples.
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