Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

Five years on, Punjab’s first solid waste management plant yet to run to capacity

- Vishal Joshi vishal.joshi@htlive.com

BATHINDA : Punjab’s first solid waste management plant in Bathinda is still to run to its full capacity even as it has been five years since it started operations as a cluster model to be replicated across the state to address the problem of processing municipal waste.

Managed by Delhi-based Jindal Infrastruc­ture Transporta­tion and Fabricatio­n (JITF), the plant was to generate electricit­y and produce manure from the municipal waste. But since the waste from 17 urban local bodies (other than Bathinda) was not transporte­d to the processing site, the plant never ran at its full capacity since 2016.

The project under the publicpriv­ate partnershi­p (PPP) mode was designed to manage 350 tonnes of municipal waste every day from the cluster of 18 urban local bodies of southern Punjab districts of Mansa, Muktsar and Fazilka besides Bathinda.

But the project, conceived and executed by the previous Shiromani Akali Dal-Bharatiya Janata Party (SAD-BJP) government, ran into rough weather after the promoter and the Bathinda municipal corporatio­n got entangled in arbitratio­n in 2019 over claims for its poor working.

JITF director VS Luthra was unavailabl­e for comments.

Company officials said their main contention was non-payment of tipping fee by the MC for collection of garbage and non-availabili­ty of additional land for the second phase of the sanitary landfill site. “The firm demanded Rs 758 crore from the municipali­ty for causing it a loss due to non-execution of work and investment of Rs 100 crore in machinery,” said an official.

The civic body, on the other hand, has sought damages of Rs 872 crore from the company for its alleged inability to run the plant as per agreement. MC superinten­ding engineer HS Bhullar said a three-member panel of arbitrator­s heard the matter last on April 20 this year and the next date is yet to be announced.

“The civic body is collecting about 120 tonnes of waste and transporti­ng it to the processing site daily. It is the duty of the JITF to collect the waste from rest of the municipal bodies. In the absence of sufficient material, JITF has failed to start the waste-to-energy project,” said Bhullar.

Officials said when the project was initiated in 2011, it faced opposition from the residents of the areas around the project site.

“For more than three decades, a large open space on the Bathinda-Mansa road was used for dumping waste. When the administra­tion initiated a scientific disposal project, a section of people opposed the project, claiming that the method was hazardous. The constructi­on work started only in 2015 after the National Green Tribunal (NGT) gave it a clearance,” said the source.

Following an agitation in the run-up to the last assembly elections, Manpreet Badal (now finance minister) had announced to shift the plant to a new site. But the MC took no step in the last four-and-a-half years to find an alternate project site.

 ?? HT PHOTO ?? The solid waste management plant in Bathinda.
HT PHOTO The solid waste management plant in Bathinda.

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