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‘Two-thirds of waste produced finds way to Buddha Nallah’

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RAGHAV OHRI

Posted: Mar 06, 2008 at 0034 hrs IST

Chandigarh, March 5 “For the last 12 years, of the around 36,000 tonnes of hazardous waste being produced by industries in Punjab every year, only 13,000 tonne manages to reach the dumping site meant for such waste. The rest is dumped into the Buddha Nallah”. This was submitted by the counsel appearing for the P Ram Committee today in the ongoing Buddha Nallah case.

The Chief Justice of the Punjab and Haryana High Court, Justice Vijender Kumar Jain, has ordered a probe into the issue. The probe will be conducted by the P Ram Committee along with the PPCB.

The data has been provided by the Punjab Government. The industrial units close to the Nallah dump their waste into the water body. A major part of the effluents flows down to Ludhiana where the Nallah joins the Sutlej.

Advocate A R Takkar, counsel for the P Ram Committee, and the Punjab Pollution Control Board have claimed that the massive quantity of hazardous waste is being dumped into the Buddha Nallah to save expenditure on transportation. In November 2007, the Punjab government had identified a site in Nimbuan village, Patiala district, on for dumping hazardous waste, on the directions of the Supreme Court. According to the procedure, every industry in Punjab has to seek authorisation from the PPCB for storing waste in sealed containers.

For the next hearing, the Chief Justice has sought a list of all such industrial units which dump their waste into the Buddha Nallah or the Sidhwan Canal. The judge has also taken the Ludhiana SSP to task for showing insensitivity towards pollution of the Buddha Nullah. The SSP has been directed to immediately take up complaints against industrial units and other institutions as regards contamination of the Nallah. He has also been asked to become a member of the committee constituted to clean up waste being dumped into the Nallah. The committee, which was set up on the directions of the High Court, is being chaired by Secretary, Science and Technology, Punjab.

“Public involvement and public awareness regarding pollution and dumping of waste is a laudable effort but at the same time, the administration should also make all endeavours that no waste is thrown into the Nallah, which has become a dumping site for industries” Justice Jain observed.

Directing removal of all encroachments around the Nallah by March 31, 2008, the High Court has directed Punjab government to file an affidavit explaining as to how the hazardous waste will be treated before being dumped into the Nallah.

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