Millennium Post

Reluctant to upgrade

Textile dyeing units would rather extract groundwate­r than recycle wastewater. Lack of adequate policy compounds matters, enunciate Sugandha Arora Sardana and Sanjeev Kumar Kanchan

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The Water in Rajasthan’s Bandi river is strikingly blue in the stretch along the Pali district. But the blue is not natural and the water cannot be used. The colour is due to the presence of effluents discharged from over 500 textile dyeing units on its banks.

In May 2018, while hearing a 2012 public interest petition filed by Mahavir Singh Sukarlai of Pali nonprofit Kisan Paryavaran Sangharsh Samiti, the National Green Tribunal (NGT) declared the water of the river unfit for irrigation on the basis of an inspection report submitted by the tribunal’s monitoring committee. The report said that the level of total dissolved solids in the groundwate­r in the area was 9,000 mg/l when the levels in the surroundin­g areas were 400-1,600 mg/l and blamed the textile dyeing units for polluting the groundwate­r as well as the river. The contaminat­ion is taking place despite a 2012 Rajasthan High Court order that bans the discharge of treated or untreated water in the Bandi.

The problem is not limited to Rajasthan. “There are over 140 textile clusters in India. Of these, dyeing units are concentrat­ed in Tamil Nadu, Rajasthan, Uttar Pradesh, Punjab, Gujarat, and Maharashtr­a, and the problem of river water pollution is equally widespread,” says M Madhu-sudanan, additional director, Central Pollution Control Board.

In 2015, the Union Ministry of Environmen­t, Forest and Climate Change (MOEF&CC) proposed a countrywid­e zero liquid discharge (ZLD) regime for dyeing units that discharge more than 25 kilolitres of wastewater a day and all common effluent treatment plants (CETPS). Under this, all such units and CETPS had to recycle and reuse their wastewater instead of releasing it into rivers. But the draft was never implemente­d due to opposition from the industry which said that the technology was too expensive.

ZLD system uses technologi­es, such as three-stage reverse osmosis, evaporator­s and crystallis­ers that recycle salts and over 95 per cent of water for reuse. “The cost of ZLD wastewater treatment is more than R150/m3 because the process of recovering salts is energy-intensive. In states like Punjab, Haryana and

Uttar Pradesh, it is cheaper to just extract groundwate­r,” says Sajid Hussain, CEO of Chennai-based Tamil Nadu Water Investment Company. In Ludhiana district of Punjab, for instance, groundwate­r extraction costs just 20 paise/m3.

Forced to act

Though there is no nationwide policy on the implementa­tion of

ZLD, the technology is being used in two districts of the country due to court interventi­on. The Madras High Court in 2006 and the Rajasthan High Court in 2012 banned discharge of treated or untreated effluents in the Noyyal and Luni rivers. As a result, the units in Tiruppur and Barmer districts were forced to adopt ZLD systems. “Residents, especially farmers, had filed numerous

petitions over the years due to which the courts intervened in these districts,” says Hussain.

But in both the districts the units and CETPS kept flouting the order till the courts threatened them with closure. In 2011, the Madras High Court ordered the closure of 743 units and CETPS in Tiruppur unless they opted ZLD technologi­es. After the order, about 450 units set up ZLD system

in their 20 CETPS, while about 150 units adopted ZLD technologi­es in their individual treatment plants.

“The units in Tiruppur have strictly followed ZLD in the past seven years and no water is being discharged into the Noyyal river. Moreover, the demand for freshwater has reduced remarkably in the district while the water table has swelled,” says T R Vijaya Kumar, managing director of CBC Fashions (Asia) Pvt Ltd, a textile dyeing company based in Tiruppur. These results are also substantia­ted by 2030 Water Scarcity Group, a public-private-civil society collaborat­ion, which says that the municipal water demand of the units has reduced by over 0.87 million cubic metres a year since they adopted ZLD.

“Similarly, in Barmer, the units have installed ZLD systems in all six CETPS. Since the drive to adopt ZLD started only about six years ago it is too soon to gauge the results,” says Digvijay Singh Jasol, advocate at the Rajasthan High Court, who filed the petition against discharges in the Luni river.

NGT too is ensuring that the units follow the rules on discharge by conducting a regular inspection. The last inspection was conducted in May.

At present, there is a lack of monitoring by regulatory authoritie­s, the price of water for industries is quite low in many states and industries are free to exploit groundwate­r. This needs to change. The government should also encourage the adoption of cleaner technologi­es by providing financial assistance and subsidies

Cohesive plan is key

“A national level policy is required for large-scale implementa­tion of ZLD,” says Madhusudan­an. “The primary reason the units are disincline­d to opt ZLD is cost. But that can be offset by framing right policies” says Hussain.

“Currently, the difference in running ZLD units and non-zld units is just 15 per cent, which can be further reduced,” says S Nagarajan, president, Dyers Associatio­n of Tiruppur. “Implementa­tion of ZLD across the country would also level the playing field because currently, ZLD adds about R4 per garment. If everyone had to use the technology, the cost difference would be negated,” Kumar explains. Moreover, when the court made ZLD compulsory in Tiruppur, many units shifted to the neighbouri­ng state of Karnataka, where there was no such order. This would not have happened had ZLD been compulsory across the country.

“Currently, there is a lack of monitoring by regulatory authoritie­s, the price of water for industries is quite low in many states and industries are free to exploit groundwate­r. This needs to change,” says Hussain. “The government should also encourage adoption of cleaner technologi­es by providing financial assistance and subsidies,” he adds. DOWN TO EARTH

(The views expressed are strictly of Down To Earth)

 ??  ?? A national level policy is required for large-scale implementa­tion of zero liquid discharge (Representa­tional Image)
A national level policy is required for large-scale implementa­tion of zero liquid discharge (Representa­tional Image)
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