Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Life among mountains of garbage

Ghaila village faces environmen­tal hazards as the LMC has been dumping tonnes of Lucknow’s waste here

- Anupam Srivastava n anupam.srivastava@hindustant­imes.com

Residents of Ghaila village, 20 kms from the state capital, are paying the price for their proximity to a bustling city like Lucknow. A clean place 10 years back, it has turned into a ‘mountain of garbage’ as the Lucknow Municipal Corporatio­n has dumped millions of tonnes of solid waste in a secluded area of this village.

Spread over an area of 661.25 hectare, Ghaila – with a total population of 3,323 people – is a living example of poor solid waste management for any city in the world, courtesy lack of environmen­tal understand­ing among civic agencies.

The 519 houses here are living amid stink, polluted air and polluted water. Before the villagers could realise the gravity of the damage the garbage had caused to their environmen­t, tonnes of Lucknow’s filth was already piled up in the village.

Residents of Ghaila organised a number of demonstrat­ions and even chased away trucks of LMC, which were dumping garbage at the site. But that was not enough to keep the filth away from their village. They approached the National Green Tribunal and the pollution control Board. These bodies directed the municipal corporatio­n not to dump waste in Ghaila.

As a result, LMC has been grappling with the problem of dumping the 1,500 metric tonnes of solid waste produced in the city at any new landfill site because the landfill site of Shivri is still not able to handle waste, even at its full operationa­l capacity.

The villagers say they are unable to bear the stink emanating from the filth. They had been protesting against the dumping of waste but the local administra­tion along with LMC never paid heed to their demands.

Only after the interferen­ce by NGT and Pollution Control Board, the LMC promised to stop dumping the solid waste at Ghaila. “Stopping the dumping is not enough, we need the treatment of such waste,” said Subhash Singh, a resident of Ghaila.

According to LMC’s environmen­t engineer Pankaj Bhushan, “Municipal authoritie­s need to prioritise public health and quality of life when transition­ing to modern waste management systems. The corporatio­n has invited expression of interest proposals from companies dealing in solid waste management to tell what LMC can do at a site like Ghaila. The companies can come out with a proposal to develop capping on filth.”

He said capping of filth would be done with clay in a scientific way.

A park would be developed on 70 acre area where garbage has been dumped all these years. This will help decompose the garbage slowly. The park will feature an intricate system for capturing the gaseous results of decaying garbage.

“The trash of the past will be converted into a landscape as a usable and beneficial public space. We will show how a dead landfill can be beautifull­y reborn as a park,” said Bhushan.

He said another way of handling filth is composting of waste but the waste at Ghaila has a high amount of plastic and polythene content so this would reducing chances of composting here.

Municipal commission­er Udairaj Singh said, “Composting is the natural process of decomposin­g and recycling waste material into a humus-rich soil by successive action of bacteria, fungi, actinomyce­tes, or earthworms.”

But here, many common materials can be composted on-site, and many cannot.

Those which can be composted are food wastes, leaves, grass clippings, plant trimmings, straw, shredded paper, animal manure, and municipal solid wastes.

But plastic, polythene, bio- medical waste cannot be composted, he added.

Environmen­talist VK Joshi said, “Composts have some disadvanta­ges if they are processed or used under inappropri­ate conditions. But unscientif­ic dumping of waste must be avoided and the LMC must develop at least 10 landfill sites for a big city like Lucknow, where around 50 lakh people live at a time. The corporatio­n should not depend on a single landfill site for dumping waste of an entire city. Resident welfare societies must also be encouraged to set up small solid waste plants in which waste of colonies can be recycled.”

 ?? DEEPAK GUPTA/HT PHOTOS ?? A man approaches his makeshift house on the garbage dumping ground in Ghaila village on Hardoi Road, which is almost 20 km away from Lucknow.
DEEPAK GUPTA/HT PHOTOS A man approaches his makeshift house on the garbage dumping ground in Ghaila village on Hardoi Road, which is almost 20 km away from Lucknow.

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