Hindustan Times (Delhi)

North Delhi Municipal Corp to start work on waste-to-energy plant at Bhalswa next month

- Vibha Sharma vibha.sharma@htlive.com

NEW DELHI: The North Delhi Municipal Corporatio­n will start the constructi­on of the city’s fourth waste-to-energy plant in Bhalswa from August 31.

The civic agency has awarded the contract to Essel Group, which will be establishi­ng the plant on 12 acres, next to the Bhalswa landfill. While the constructi­on is on, the company will have to take clearances from authoritie­s concerned, including the Delhi Pollution Control Commit- tee, by end of the year.

The deadline for commission­ing the plant is August 2020, but the company will start collecting garbage for generating electricit­y from next year, an official from the North corporatio­n said.

“The waste-to-energy plant will consume 1,500 metric tonnes of garbage every day and generate 15 megawatts of electricit­y. The company will be allowed to generate revenue by selling this electricit­y and, in lieu of that, it will be paying ₹11.88 crore to the North corporatio­n every year,” Veena Virmani, standing com- mittee chairperso­n, said.

Once functional, it will be the city’s fourth waste-to-energy plant — after Ghazipur, NarelaBawa­na and Okhla. While the plant at Ghazipur has a capacity to process 1,200 metric tonnes of garbage daily to produce 12MW electricit­y, the one at Okhla turns 1,500 metric tonnes of waste daily into 9MW electricit­y. The plant at Narela Bawana has a capacity to process 2,000 metric tonnes of waste to generate 20MW electricit­y.

The land earmarked for the waste-to-energy plant at Bhalswa was earlier being used as composting plant but it become nonfunctio­nal after the corporatio­n terminated the contract in 2015.

“Under the agreement, another company was to treat 500 metric tonnes of garbage, which steadily decreased to 100-200 metric tonnes. In March 2014, the Delhi Pollution Control Committee served a closure notice to that company for violating pollution norms under the Water and Air (Prevention and Control of Pollution) Act. The matter later went to the high court,” a North corporatio­n official said.

Once the plant at Bhalswa is operationa­l, the civic agency will shut the Bhalswa landfill and develop a green cover over the area.

The 40-acre Bhalswa landfill was commission­ed in 1994 and was saturated in 2002. However, with no alternativ­e site available, civic agency continued to dump garbage there, Virmani said.

At present, the North corporatio­n generates 4,000 metric tonnes of garbage every day, of which 2,000 metric tonnes goes to Bhalswa landfill and the rest to the plant at Narela-bawana.

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