Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Civic bodies process waste, but get more in the bargain

- Vatsala Shrangi vatsala.shrangi@htlive.com

The three municipal corporatio­ns working on reducing the garbage at the three landfills in Delhi --- Okhla, Bhalswa and Ghazipur -- have a new problem at hand. The civic bodies are looking at ways to dispose of at least 1.8 million metric tonnes of inert waste that the processing of waste at the landfills has generated.

The civic bodies deployed trommel machines at these landfills to segregate the waste and decrease waste there. A trommel machine is a mechanical sieve that separates the landfill waste into three components -- municipal solid waste, constructi­on and demolition waste and soil/sand.

According to the South Delhi Municipal Corporatio­n, which manages the Okhla landfill, 625,000 metric tonnes of inert waste has been generated so far. Though some of it has been handled,

NEW DELHI:

the SDMC standing committee on August 31 has approved the proposal to shift the inert waste to two sites, NTPC Eco Park and Tajpur Pahadi (both near Badarpur) at an estimated cost of ₹19.50 crore. “A tender for the same will be floated this month. The two sites together can accommodat­e 690,000 metric tonnes of waste. An administra­tive approval has been given. This will help fasttrack the bio-mining process,” said Colonel (retd) BK Oberoi, chairperso­n, SDMC standing committee.

Since last year, the civic body, under a temporary arrangemen­t, has been sending some of the inert material at these two sites. “Already, 350,000 metric tonnes of inert waste has been removed from the landfill,” Oberoi said.

Oberoi said the National Highways Authority of India (NHAI), which had earlier agreed to use inert waste for building of roads, has refused to use it after testing material. “The NHAI told us that the material could not be used for base-filling, as the road may sink. We are now looking for alternativ­e ways to dump it,” he said.

According to the officials of the civic bodies, mining of the waste at the three landfills has led to significan­t reduction in their heights. The height of garbage dump at Bhalswa has come down from 65 metres to 54 metres, from 65 metres to 50 metres at Ghazipur, and from 55 metres to 38 metres at Okhla, civic officials said.

“At the Bhalswa landfill, we plan to increase the number of trommel machines from 24 to 60 by next month. We have been using the inert waste in filling up low-lying areas such as streets of unauthoris­ed colonies and vacant spaces in areas such as Narela, Rohini, Rani Khera, among others,” said a senior North corporatio­n official, requesting anonymity.

East Delhi Municipal Corporatio­n officials said they were going to hire an agency to handle both processing of waste and dumping of the resultant inert waste. “We plan to increase the number of machines at the site from 20 to 30. Currently, dumping of inert material is too much to handle, and it will be more organised once a single agency is handling the entire work,” said a senior EDMC official.

Experts said mining of waste has to be done in a structured manner.

Atin Biswas, programme director, solid waste management project, Centre for Science and Environmen­t (CSE), said, “While the civic bodies are employing trommel machines, they also need to get one agency to dump the inert waste as well so that the space reclaimed from the landfill is not lost to another pile of waste. Simultaneo­usly, the civic bodies should take steps to reduce the amount of waste is dumped daily at the landfills, and focus on segregatio­n of waste is done at source,” said Biswas.

 ?? SANJEEV VERMA/HT ?? Over 625,000 metric tonne of inert waste has been generated at the landfill so far
SANJEEV VERMA/HT Over 625,000 metric tonne of inert waste has been generated at the landfill so far

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