India

Delhi’s New Pilot Project, Waste Collection Vehicles To Be Fitted With GPS Devices: Officials

The national capital, Delhi is all set to install GPS devices in waste collection vehicles and monitor them in Delhi’s west zone and Dwarka areas as the National Green Tribunal-appointed high-level committee has ordered to start this pilot project, officials said.

Official statements

The first meeting of the committee for monitoring the management and disposal of municipal solid waste, headed by Lieutenant Governor V K Saxena, was held on April 25. The committee was constituted by the NGT in February.

During the meeting, the committee decided that a project be started on a pilot basis in the west zone and Dwarka where cleaning and waste collection starts at 5 am, Raj Niwas officials said.

Also, the officials said that it was also decided to increase the number of waste collection vehicles and install GPS devices in all of them for monitoring them.

The committee also directed officials to submit a report with photographs every day, they added.

Also Read: Jiah Khan Suicide Case: A 10-Year-Long Legal Battle That Will Finally Come To an End On 28th April

Official reports

Taking notes from the meeting, the official said that it was informed that biomining and disposal of legacy waste, which was being carried out by the Municipal Corporation of Delhi (MCD) at an average rate of 1.4 lakh metric tonnes (MT) per month between October 2019 and May 2022, had picked up pace substantially after LG Saxena’s interventions. During the period from June to December 2022, it had reached an average of 6 lakh MT per month.

Subsequently, interventions like integrated tenders for biomining, transportation and disposal have led to a current average of about 7.5 lakh MT of waste being disposed of every month, with a daily average of about 25,000 MT at the three legacy waste sites at Bhalswa, Ghazipur and Okhla, they said.

Moreover, the officials said that LG issued instructions for the same to be scaled up to the full capacity of 30,000 MT per day.

The committee also decided to implement a revised ward-wise action plan and asked the MCD to submit the name of the concerned officer within 10 days for achieving 100 per cent waste segregation.

It also directed the additional divisional railway manager to immediately resolve the issue of solid waste lifting alongside railway tracks with the MCD.

Alina Khan

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