South China Morning Post

The Ganges River is one of the world’s most polluted.Will it ever be clean?

- Kalpana Sunder

The ghats, or steps leading into a body of water, at Varanasi, India’s holiest city in Uttar Pradesh, are crowded with people, some bathing in the Ganges River, others performing ceremonies on its banks.

Many Indians believe the Ganges, originatin­g from the ice cave of Gaumukh near the temple town of Gangotri, has a self-purifying quality. The river is also seen as a living goddess, supplying water for some 40 per cent of the country’s population.

But the holy waterway is also somewhat of a paradox, as it became through the decades of human activities one of the world’s most polluted rivers. It is linked to several waterborne diseases which kill thousands of adults and children annually.

The government has been trying to clean up the Ganges since the 1980s, and has spent millions of dollars.

In May 2019, the Central Pollution Control Board said in a report the water from the Ganges was absolutely unfit for “direct drinking”. The river’s faecal coliform level (found in gut and faeces of warm-blooded animals) was detected to be three to 12 times higher than the permissibl­e level at most interstate boundaries.

The National Green Tribunal in 2022, while hearing a cluster of cases around Ganges pollution dating back to 1985, observed that “nearly 50 per cent of untreated sewage and substantia­l industrial effluents are still being discharged in the river or its tributarie­s, in absence of requisite functional treatment capacity”.

Describing government clean-up efforts as a “collective failure”, Priti Mahesh, chief programme coordinato­r of Toxics Link, an environmen­tal NGO in New Delhi, told the Post: “Despite efforts, the faltering progress reflects not just environmen­tal neglect, but also the systemic challenges that must be addressed with unwavering determinat­ion and innovative solutions.”

When the Ganges enters the plains and flows across 2,600km in northern India, it passes through hundreds of towns and cities such as Allahabad, Patna, Kanpur and Kolkata, absorbing raw sewage, plastic, agricultur­al run-offs, toxic pesticides, domestic waste and industrial effluents.

The National Mission for Clean Ganga (NMCG), a clean-up programme launched by Prime Minister Narendra Modi in 2014, estimates that about 12,000 million litres per day (mld) of sewage is generated in the Ganges basin, against which presently there is a treatment capacity of only around 4,000 mld.

The NMCG started life in 2014 as the Namami Gange project, in which Modi pledged 200 billion rupees towards the clean-up of the Ganges.

The twin objectives of the NMCG are “effective abatement of pollution, conservati­on and rejuvenati­on of National River Ganga”. The government calls it a scientific programme that uses technology to clean the Ganges. It promises to make the river fit for bathing at least.

The initial target was to clean up the river by 2019, but this was extended to 2022 with an additional budget of 100 billion rupees. The target has since been moved to 2026.

The Namami Gange project has been recognised by the United Nations as a World Restoratio­n Flagship. Awarded in 2022 under the UN Decade on Ecosystem Restoratio­n, the accolade “recognises ambitious efforts to revive the natural world, which is labouring under a triple crisis of climate change, nature and biodiversi­ty loss, and pollution and waste”.

Varanasi, the ancient city that is the spiritual centre of the Hindus, is also Modi’s political constituen­cy. Sewage pumping stations, built in the 1970s and upgraded, line the riverfront in Varanasi. The city today has laws banning plastics and requiring boats on the river to use compressed natural gas, while public toilets have been built to reduce open defecation.

The government has also focused on planting and growing native trees along watercours­es, which helps prevent pollutants and sediment from entering the river.

“The Ganges is much cleaner now than before. We don’t see dead bodies, garbage or rotten flowers floating. There used to be open sewers flowing into the river, we don’t see that nowadays,” said Hemant Sinha, 45, a boatman in Varanasi.

The Ministry of Jal Shakti, which is in charge of water issues, said in 2022 that “between 2018 and 2021 there was a marked improvemen­t in the state of the river as a result of multisecto­ral interventi­ons”.

The improvemen­t in water quality also led to “increased sightings of aquatic species such as Gangetic Dolphins otters, turtles and Hilsa,” it said.

Yogi Adityanath, the chief minister of Uttar Pradesh, last year said dolphins which were on the verge of extinction had started reappearin­g in the river because the water had become clean.

Despite this, lawyer Sanjay Upadhyay said efforts to clean up the Ganges had not looked into different techno-innovative solutions available, including using wetlands for waste water treatment, or reverse osmosis or crystallis­ation of pollutants.

“Actual monitoring on the ground is quite vague. We also need a platform where pilot projects to try potential solutions to treat sewage or clean up water bodies can be experiment­ed and chosen on their value,” said Upadhyay, founder of India’s first environmen­tal law firm, Enviro Legal Defence.

 ?? Photo: AFP ?? Thousands of people gather during evening prayers on the banks of the Ganges River in Haridwar, India. The river is seen as a living goddess.
Photo: AFP Thousands of people gather during evening prayers on the banks of the Ganges River in Haridwar, India. The river is seen as a living goddess.

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