Urban News

  • Increase font size
  • Default font size
  • Decrease font size

Dirt wave

Print PDF

Indian Express   26.07.2010

Dirt wave

sharvaripatwa Tags : garbage, waste Posted: Mon Jul 26 2010, 01:17 hrs

Garbage

A fish seller amid the garbage at Marve beach
Pune:  The beaches in the island city may be the favourite hangout spots for Mumbaiites but one cannot expect clean waves lashing the shore or children playing with sand castles anymore. All that adorn the shores today are piles of garbage, dirty plastic bags and even carcasses. “There is a lot of garbage on beaches including plastic waste dumped by visitors and even those who live nearby,” said B P Patil, chief engineer, Solid Waste Management (SWM). “In monsoon, the high tide brings garbage from low lying areas on the sea coast,” says Neville David of Juhu Beach Life Guard Association.

“Trucks come and collect the garbage from beaches everyday but even then it is impossible to keep them clean especially in monsoon,” says R S Mashelkar, senior life guard at Aksa beach. Sneha, a volunteer who participates in cleaning drives, says, “In monsoon, beach cleaning drives can truly be successful only if there is better management of waste throughout the city.”

“On an average a total of 20-25 tonne of garbage is collected from the city’s beaches which include Girgaum, Dadar, Mahim, Juhu, Aksa, and Gorai,” says Patil. “In monsoon, the garbage collected from here increases to at least 90 metric tonnes per day,” he adds.

In total, Mumbai generates almost 6,000 tonnes of waste, of which at least 5% is plastic, and most of it flows towards the seas during monsoon, according to SWM officials. According to a senior official, many pockets of the city do not have a proper solid waste disposal mechanism until now. In those cases, people throw garbage near their houses and if not taken to dumping grounds, it will most likely end up flowing towards seas during a high tide pressure, he added. These beaches turn even dirtier during Ganesh Chaturthi as most idols, and other waste including flowers and thermocol material, are immersed in the sea.

A five-year contract was awarded to private contractors in 2006 to maintain cleanliness at beaches in Dadar, Mahim, Versova, and Juhu, said Patil. The contract for Gorai and Aksa beaches has been given only last year, he said.
Last Updated on Monday, 26 July 2010 11:08