Wanted an eco-friendly, green disposal system
Bindu Shajan Perappadan, The Hindu
Delhi’s green watchdog, the Delhi Pollution Control
Committee (DPCC), has warned of a critical environmental crisis if the
Capital cannot manage its municipal waste properly.
“The
sheer volume of waste generated by Delhi is a huge challenge. We simply
have our hands full. The three dumping sites at Ghazipur, Bhalaswa and
Okhla are exhausted. There is no space to add waste. Fresh sites are
being looked into with the Narela-Bawana Road site now being touted as
the newest area,” said DPCC member secretary Sandeep Kumar Mishra.
DPCC
claims that it has already informed the Delhi Municipal Corporations of
the hazardous practice of continuing to dump into the three exhausted
yards (all of them have crossed the 30-metre danger mark height level).
“Delhi
is a landlocked State with limited land availability. The mountain of
municipal solid waste that we produce every day has to be managed in a
manner that will ensure least pollution – water table contamination, air
pollution -- and zero health and nuisance value to the human population
near the dumping sites,” said Mr. Mishra.
Waste-to-energy plants
Suggesting
how to scientifically manage the waste, the DPCC has asked the
municipal corporations to make functional waste-to-energy plants that
will ensure disposal of waste in an environmentally viable and
self-sustainable manner.
“With the Delhi Development
Authority stating that there is severe scarcity of land in the Capital,
the answer to manage our waste could well be the introduction of
waste-to-energy plants, which environmentalists claim is a major health
hazard. Delhi has one such plant that is fully functional and we have
asked the municipal corporations to start the two plants that we have,”
said Mr. Mishra.
“We have told the municipal
corporations to close the three dumping sites and develop their own
waste-to-energy (burning trash to generate electricity) and composting
(to produce manure) plants,” he said.
Meanwhile, labour groups and environmentalists have cautioned against the dependence on waste-to-energy plants.
Environmentalist
Gopal Krishna said: “Construction of waste-to-energy plants is an
irresponsible move by the Delhi Government to try and manage the growing
problem of waste management. The existing Timarpur-Okhla
waste-to-energy incinerator has violated every rule in the book
including environmental clearance conditions.”
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