ESS Key
BIo Medical waste Management

When you refuse to reuse, It’s the Earth you abuse.

Services Provided

  • Daily Scheduled Pick Up of BMW
  • Treatment of BMW
  • Disposal of BMW
  • Reporting
  • Supply of color coded bio-degradable plastic bags for BMW collection

Services Applicable To

  • Hospitals
  • Nursing Homes
  • Clinics/Dispensaries
  • Diagnostic Centres
  • Beauty Clinics/Cosmetic Centres
  • Pharmaceutical Companies

Important Links

  • Segregation Chart
  • Bio Medical waste Management Rules
  • DHS Registration Form
  • Annual Registration Form II
  • Process Chart

Segregation Chart

Bio Medical waste should be segregated into the color coded containers/bags at the point of generation of waste as per the Schedule II of the BMW Rules prior to its storage, transportation, treatment and disposal. The Segregation Chart

BMW Rules 2016

G.S.R. 343(E).-Whereas the Bio-Medical Waste (Management and Handling) Rules, 1998 was published vide notification number S.O. 630 (E) dated the 20th July, 1998, by the Government of India in the erstwhile Ministry of Environment and Forests

Overall Process

Ess Kay Hygienic Services Waste Management Pvt. Ltd, a common bio medical waste treatment facility (CBWTF) authorised by Haryana State Pollution Control Board follows the BMW Rules for the Collection, transportation, treatment and disposal.

Welcome To Ess Kay Hygienic Services

Ess Kay Hygienic Services Waste Management Pvt. Ltd., a common bio medical waste treatment facility (CBWTF), is authorized by Haryana State Pollution Control Board for collection, transportation, treatment and disposal of bio medical waste.

Bio-medical waste means “any solid and/or liquid waste including its container and any intermediate product, which is generated during the diagnosis, treatment or immunization of human beings or animals, or in research activities pertaining thereto or in the production or testing of biologicals.”

Bio-medical waste consists of human anatomical waste like tissues, organs and body parts; animal wastes generated during research or from veterinary hospitals; microbiology and biotechnology wastes; waste sharps like hypodermic needles, syringes, scalpels, and broken glass; discarded medicines and cytotoxic drugs; soiled waste such as dressings, bandages, plaster casts, material contaminated with blood, tubes and catheters; liquid waste from any infected area; incineration ash; and other chemical wastes.