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Have funds, not clearance: three dumping ground projects stuck

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Indian  Express   13.10.2010

Have funds, not clearance: three dumping ground projects stuck

Stuti Shukla Tags : garbage disposal, project Posted: Wed Oct 13 2010, 03:29 hrs

Mumbai:  A garbage disposal and processing project each at Deonar, Mulund and Kanjurmarg, for which the BMC has set aside Rs 170 crore and the Centre Rs 110 crore, are stuck with the state yet clear lease of the land to the private operators that would execute the projects. The BMC has been waiting for approval to lease the land for 25 years at Re 1 a square metre.

The projects involve partial closure of the Deonar and Mulund grounds, with waste treatment plants coming up there, and a scientific landfill at Kanjurmarg. BMC says the lease is crucial for private operators to insure expensive machinery to be installed.

Chief engineer, solid waste management, B P Patil said the private players, who have a joint venture with global firms for technical and financial support, need it to insure machines. “It is part of our tender agreement to lease out the land for 25 years at a minimal rate so that contractors can insure their machinery worth crores. We will make sure they do not commercially exploit the land and it is returned after 25 years.”

Reminders from Municipal Commissioner Swadheen Kshatriya to the state Urban Development department to permit the lease have not received any response. Patil said, “Maybe they have more important projects before they think it is important to act on Mumbai’s basic waste disposal projects.”

Partial closure of the 80-year-old Deonar dumping ground, approved over two years back, will take place in two phases; 65 hectares will be closed, a processing plant and a sanitary landfill will come up on 55 hectares of the remaining. Now, 120 hectares of the total 132 is covered by untreated waste. Tatva Global Environment Ltd is taking up the project on a design-build-own-operate-transfer basis. A similar project is on at Mulund.  At Kanjurmarg landfill and Material Recovery Facility (MRF) site, work on a peripheral road, a compound wall, an administrative building, water supply, service reservoirs and plantation of trees has begun.

Last Updated on Wednesday, 13 October 2010 10:35