India needs New Delhi-sized landfills for waste by 2050: Report

June 25, 2017 04:28 pm | Updated 04:41 pm IST - New Delhi

With around 50%of India’s population projected to be living in urban areas by 2050, the volume of waste generation will grow by five per cent per year.

With around 50%of India’s population projected to be living in urban areas by 2050, the volume of waste generation will grow by five per cent per year.

With India littering its waste without sufficient treatment, it needs to set aside about 88 sq. km of precious land - the size of New Delhi - for landfills by 2050, industry association Assocham said on Sunday, citing its study.

“Considering that most of the waste in India is dumped without treatment, it would require an estimated 88 square kilometre (sq km) of precious land to be brought under waste disposal through landfilling by 2050, which is equivalent to the size of the area under the administration of the New Delhi Municipal Council,” said a joint report of Assocham, and accounting firm, PwC.

“This will eventually render the land unfit for any other use for as long as a half century before it can be stabilised for other uses,” said the report, ‘Waste Management in India: Shifting Gears.’

With around 50%of India’s population projected to be living in urban areas by 2050, the volume of waste generation will grow by five per cent per year.

Thus, the projected waste quantity is 101 million tonnes (MT)a year by 2021, 164 MT a year by 2031, and 436 MT a year by 2050, according to the report.

It said that Tier I cities with population ranging from one to five million have been estimated to generate around 80% of the country’s total waste.

The study estimates the current per day per capita waste generation in medium cities at around 300 to 400 g, and for large cities, between 400 and 600 g. This figure would increase in line with present urbanisation and consumption patterns.

The report noted some issues hampering waste management in India are improper planning, complex institutional set-up, constraints in capacity for waste management and limited funds with urban local bodies.

“Though private sector can play a critical and greater role in waste management in India, there are various issues and bottlenecks on different fronts that have made it challenging to successfully implement projects - policy and regulatory, financing, project conceptualisation and structuring, technology and capacity,” an Assocham statement said here.

The report recommended that the government accord industry status to the waste management sector “to provide it necessary boost” and ensure regulatory adherence.

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