Delhi
Increase Capacity Of Waste-To-Energy Plants: Lieutenant Governor Anil Baijal Tells Delhi Civic Bodies
Lieutenant Governor Anil Baijal gave an assurance to the citizens residing near the Ghazipur landfill and said mountains of garbage will be cleared in the next two years. To ensure a speedy removal, waste-to-energy plants will scientifically treat the solid waste, according to officials
Highlights
- Dumping on Ghazipul landfill is banned after the garbage pile collapse
- East Delhi Municipal Corporation collects 4,650 tonnes of garbage daily
- Waste will be used by the National Highways Authority of India
New Delhi: Delhi Lieutenant Governor Anil Baijal on September 5 directed municipal corporations to increase the capacity of their existing waste-to-energy plants and the garbage at Ghazipur landfill site be cleared within two years beginning November. Chairing a meeting here, which was attended by Delhi Urban Development Minister Satyendar Jain, Public Works Department (PWD) Principal Secretary Ashwani Kumar and commissioners of all the three civic bodies, the Lieutenant Governor said the waste would be used by the National Highways Authority of India (NHAI) for construction of service roads.
At the meeting, East Delhi Municipal Corporation (EDMC) Commissioner apprised the Lieutenant Governor that presently, the civic body is collecting 4,650 metric tonnes (MT) of garbage per day, which consists of 2,600 metric tonnes of municipal solid waste (MSW), 1,400 metric tonnes of silt and 650 construction and demolition (C&D) waste.
The Lieutenant Governor directed the EDMC to immediately take up expansion of the capacity of the existing waste to energy plant and in the first phase, and 650 MT of additional municipal solid waste would be dispatched there at the earliest,” the Lieutenant Governor’s office said in a statement.
For the remaining 650 MT of MSW, the South Delhi Municipal Corporation was directed to get it processed at its Okhla waste to energy plant, within the prescribed environmental norms, it said.
Also Read: Ghazipur Landfill Polluting Air, Water And Soil Since 1984
It also stated that the North Delhi Municipal Corporation (NDMC) commissioner told the Lieutenant Governor that the civic body is collecting 3,900 MT MSW per day of which Narela-Bawana plant is utilising 2000 MT.
“The Lieutenant Governor directed that for the remaining 1,900 MT MSW, the capacity of Narela-Bawana plant should be increased,” the Lieutenant Governor’s office said. Lieutenant Governor Baijal said these steps would ensure that there is no further increase in mounds of garbage at Bhalswa and Ghazipur landfill sites.
The meeting was convened after a portion of the waste dump, estimated to be as high as a 15-storey building, collapsed on September 1, killing two persons.
Following the accident, Lieutenant Governor Baijal had on Saturday imposed a ban on dumping of garbage at Ghazipur landfill site, and the waste meant for it was to be diverted to a temporary site in Ranikhera near the Delhi-Haryana border.
Also Read: Delhi Sits On A Ticking Garbage Bomb: Six Latest Developments On Ghazipur Landfill Tragedy