Hindustan Times (Delhi)

The seat of Swachh Bharat campaign must come clean

- Shivani.singh@hindustant­imes.com

which ranked Alappuzha and Panjim at the top in its own survey in 2016.

But even in that ‘alternativ­e’ survey, Delhi was placed at the “bottom of the heap”. Piles of putrefying garbage and littered streets are part of the urban landscape across the national capital. Segregatio­n and recycling of waste are still done mostly informally, although the NDMC has promised to launch its ‘100% segregatio­n at source’ initiative in Lutyens’ Zone from June 5.

Recently, the NDMC also set up two vending machines in Connaught Place and India Gate to trade recyclable­s for money. The idea was probably borrowed from Curitiba’s Green Exchange Programme that covers almost 90% of the city. In Delhi, multiple layers of jurisdicti­on restrict such civic reforms to certain zones. In the NDMC’s case, even a full-scale initiative can benefit only 1.5% of Delhi’s population that produces 3% of the total garbage generated in the city.

Delhi has no citywide plan to tackle its garbage problem. The methane-filled, simmering landfills that get 3,800 tonnes of the 9,100 tonnes of garbage daily from all over the city are experienci­ng landslides due to overloadin­g. Waste-to-energy is the latest buzzword in the government. But experts say that all municipal waste combustors release a number of extremely harmful pollutants.

Landfills, in fact, are the last option for waste management and recycling is the only way to reduce the load sent to dumpsites. It is encouragin­g that in their manifestos for the recently held civic polls, the AAP and Congress vowed to rid Delhi of landfills, and the BJP, which is back in power in the three corporatio­ns, promised to build roads out of the garbage.

But for such promises to materialis­e, Delhi must first minimise its garbage generation. We need laws to make recycling mandatory for residents.

Although the municipali­ties have employed private contractor­s for recycling, much of this work is still done by rag-pickers. When it comes to integratin­g them into the system, authoritie­s drag their feet.

These reforms could be fasttracke­d if the government implemente­d the bylaws to the Solid and Plastic Waste Management Rules 2016. The rules make it mandatory to segregate garbage at source. It also proposes that people pay municipal authoritie­s for garbage management services, and suitable fines and penalties are imposed on those who litter the street, open spaces, drain or water bodies. But Delhi’s municipali­ties are already a month late in firming up these bylaws.

If the authoritie­s must come clean, we, Delhiites, must also face the mirror. Maintainin­g cleanlines­s cannot be just the government’s responsibi­lity. Without the help and participat­ion of willing citizens, would it be possible for Alappuzha or Panjim to invent their own models of successful waste management so quickly?

At a more fundamenta­l level, to be able to discard judiciousl­y, we must also bring ourselves to consume less. Who better than the residents of India’s power capital to beat the waste-andwant dynamics that have come to define our increasing­ly ‘disposable’ life?

 ?? PIB FILE ?? Narendra Modi at the Mandir Marg police station after launching Swachh Bharat campaign.
PIB FILE Narendra Modi at the Mandir Marg police station after launching Swachh Bharat campaign.

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