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  1. Login Instructions. User Manual. Swachh Bharat Mission - Urban 2.0 Guideline. Download. SBMU Website.

  2. Competitive Monitoring Framework for accelerating Swachhata outcomes in Urban India STANDARDISED PROTOCOLS For consistency in service delivery benchmarks across cities for sanitation and solid waste management

  3. swachhbharaturban.gov.in › ULB_LOGINLogin - SBM Urban

    Login. Swachh Bharat Urban. Ministry of Housing and Urban Affairs. Government of India. Home.

  4. On 1st October 2021, the Hon’ble Prime Minister launched Swachh Bharat Mission-Urban 2.0, with the overall vision of creating “Garbage Free Cities” (GFC), thereby placing India on a new trajectory of growth towards an ecosystem of holistic sanitation and waste management.

  5. Ministry of Housing and Urban Affairs partnered with Microsoft to deploy project Sangam to train municipal functionaries across India on Swachh Bharat e-Learning Portal (https://swachhbharat.azurewebsites.net/). The Swachh Bharat e-Learning Portal was launched in 2015.

  6. Log in © 2024 Swachh Bharat Mission. 2024 Swachh Bharat Mission. All rights reserved.

  7. Bank Account Details (Mandatory). Scanned copy of First Page of Bank Passbook showing Account Details (Mandatory). If Applicant does not have Aadhaar No. then copy of Aadhaar Enrollment Slip is required. ULB Official Level I can verify the Applicant's Application.

  8. 164.100.87.9 › sbmnew › HomeSwachh Bharat Urban

    Swachhata App. The app enables a citizen to post a complaint which is then forwarded to the city corporation concerned and thereafter assigned to the sanitary inspector of the particular ward.

  9. SBM (Urban) is being implemented by the Ministry of Housing and Urban Affairs (MHUA). Key thrust areas of the mission include:- Elimination of open defecation. Eradication of Manual Scavenging by converting insanitary toilets to sanitary. Modern and Scientific Municipal Solid Waste Management.

  10. Swachh Bharat Mission Urban - Gujarat. More than 50% of Indian population defecates in open, exposing the entire community, especially the poor to public health risks. Poor and middle income families spend approximately 40% of their income for treating diseases caused mainly by such public health risks.