Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Wheat crop over 32 acres reduced to ashes in Sangrur

- HT Correspond­ent

SANGRUR: Standing and ripened wheat crop over 32 acres was reduced to ashes in three villages of Sangrur on Sunday.

Suspecting that sparking in the overhead 66 KV power lines caused the fire, farmers blocked the Patiala-Sangrur highways for hours demanding compensati­on. They also accused Punjab State Power Corporatio­n Limited (PSPCL) of not taking corrective steps to check sparking in the high-tension power cables passing over the fields.

Ripened crop on over eight acres was burnt at Sohian village. “Fire tenders reached the spot when we had doused the flames. The fire was caused due to a short circuit in the overhead power cables. The power corporatio­n failed to didn’t change the wires despite repeated requests,” said Sohian panchayat member Parminder Singh Babbu.

The police and district administra­tion officials reached on the spot and tried to pacify the protesters, but they wanted PSPCL officials to visit the spot and announce compensati­on. Farmers also alleged that PSPCL officials were not answering their phone calls.

“Crop on around 100 acres was damaged last year too due to short circuit. All our pleas have gone unheard,” said Kuldeep Singh of Sohian. Meanwhile, standing crop on around 24 acres was damaged at Fagguwala and Roshanwala villages.

“I have directed tehsildars to conduct a survey of crop damage. The affected farmers will be compensate­d after we get the report,” said, additional deputy commission­er Poonamdeep Kaur. PSPCL executive engineer Ashok Singla said the corporatio­n had not received any complaint about sparking in the 66kV cables. “I have visited the fields and have checked wires. The investigat­ion is on. Farmers will be given adequate compensati­on if we find a fault in power cables,” Singla said. BATHINDA: For more than a decade, the Punjab Pollution Control Board (PPCB) has been turning a blind eye to the brazen flow of toxic waste into the Ghaggar, which has turned into a drain for industrial units at Dera Bassi and townships along its banks up to Ottu near Sirsa, where it enters Haryana.

Despite various directives of the Supreme Court and National Green Tribunal (NGT), the PPCB and Punjab government have failed to install effluent treatment plants (ETPs) at the outflow of industrial areas and sewage treatment plants (STPs) in 22 major townships along the Ghaggar in Punjab region.

The industrial towns of Mandi Gobindgarh, Dera Bassi and Rajpura remain the key points from where untreated effluents flow into the Ghaggar, as STPs and ETPs are yet to become operationa­l after the commission­ing of the projects over two years ago.

Against the required three STPs, Dera Bassi presently has only one, while land for the other two is “being arranged”, stated Punjab’s reply filed in the NGT court on February 10, 2017. The NGT had last year taken suo motu notice of news reports on contaminat­ion of the Ghaggar.

Only four of 21 identified towns of Punjab at present have functional STPs, including SAS Nagar, Zirakpur, Banur and Patiala. The towns where the much-awaited STPs are yet to become functional include Patran, Khanauri, Moonak, Lehragaga, Mandi Gobindgarh, Longowal, Sunam, Bhikhi, Bassi Pathana, Sirhind, Sangrur, Nabha, Sanaur and Sardulgarh.

BOTTLENECK­S APLENTY Besides non-availabili­ty of land for setting up STPs in many of these towns, a few municipal committees are cash-starved to run these. Patran and Sunam are two such towns where the STPs are yet to get power connection­s for lack of funds.

AN STP THAT WASN’T

The Punjab local bodies department and PPCB had submitted in

their reply that an STP was functional at Sardulgarh in Mansa district. The HT team, however, found that the town’s sewage was still flowing into the Ghaggar. The STP mentioned in the state’s reply was actually a stabilisat­ion pond, a traditiona­l check dam system to segregate solid waste before dischargin­g the effluents into the river.

SAME FATE IN HARYANA The Ghaggar meets the same fate in Haryana too, where untreated sewage flows unabated into it at as it passes through Ambala, Ambala Cantt, Naraingarh, Kalka, Berara, Kurukshetr­a, Kaithal, Sirsa and Ratia.

The reply of the Haryana Pollution Control Board, as filed in the NGT in the same case, stated two STPs of total 40 million litres per day (MLD) capacity could not become a reality before March 2019.

‘LITIGATION­S A HURDLE’ PPCB chairman Manpreet Singh Chhatwal cited “litigation­s and prosecutio­ns” as “one of the hiccups

in reforming the system and take effective measures to check river pollution”.

He said the pharmaceut­ical industry was a major pollutant in the region, and one such unit was also sealed in Dera Bassi cluster, while bank guarantees of two other units were withheld to force the defaulters to fall in line.

Even as certain field officials cited “pressures from above” as obstacles in the board’s functionin­g, Chhatwal ruled out any political interferen­ce.

 ?? HT PHOTO ?? Readytohar­vest wheat crop gutted in a village near Bhawanigar­h town in Sangrur district on Sunday.
HT PHOTO Readytohar­vest wheat crop gutted in a village near Bhawanigar­h town in Sangrur district on Sunday.

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