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Waste a burning issue here

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The Hindu                    14.03.2013

Waste a burning issue here

The Lalur Malineekaran Viruddha Samara Samithy said it would not allow further dumping of waste if the corporation failed to remove the accumulated garbage from the dumpyard
The Lalur Malineekaran Viruddha Samara Samithy said it would not allow further dumping of waste if the corporation failed to remove the accumulated garbage from the dumpyard.
 
No solution in sight for city’s garbage woes after dumping was stopped at Lalur.

As garbage continues pile up at every nook and corner of the city, the Corporation and the district administration are looking the other way. It has been over a year since dumping of garbage was stopped at Lalur. Yet, no alternative arrangement has been found for the purpose.

Filth infested by flies and maggots are strewn around even on the thoroughfares for weeks together.

People at Lalur, city corporaion’s garbage dumping yard, may have heaved a sigh of relief when the dumping came to an end last year, but the people in the city are now going through exactly what the former suffered all these years. Residents in the city are at their wit’s end because of the Corporation's refusal to acknowledge its responsibility to find a quick solution.

The Lalur Malineekaran Viruddha Samara Samithy said it would not allow further dumping of waste if the corporation failed to remove the accumulated garbage from the dumpyard.

“The garbage dump contains a huge amount of plastic. So the soil can’t be used for any other purpose without segregating the plastics.

And as the plastics have been decayed it cannot be recycled,” it said.

Meanwhile, the corporation has opted for an easy route out: burning of garbage on streets.

The health expert warn that the burning of waste will create serious environmental and health hazards. When garbage is burned in heaps it often leads to production of carbon monoxide along with carbon dioxide, said environmentalists.

Carbon monoxide is a product of incomplete combustion of organic matter due to insufficient oxygen supply. Carbon monoxide mainly causes health problems by combining with haemoglobin to form carboxyhemoglobin in the blood. This prevents oxygen binding to hemoglobin, reducing the oxygen-carrying capacity of blood.

Burning of plastics and PVC produces many toxic fumes, including dioxin, which causes cancer, the doctors noted. “Continuous exposure to the fumes from burning plastics may cause diseases, including chemical pneumonia and bronchospasm, sudden constriction of the muscles in the walls of the bronchioles. Children and elderly people are more vulnerable , they said.

Many city residents complain of nausea and vomiting as the burning of organic matter produces sulphur gases, which has pungent smell.

The health expert warn that the burning of waste will create serious health hazards.