Is a Green Revolution Poisoning Indias Capital?, New York Times 11/9/24
Burning the garbage was supposed to help solve one of Delhis most startling environmental crises: the giant mountains of trash that soar nearly 200 feet into the air and eclipse the capitals skyline putrid, 20-story slopes of waste that collapse and crush people, or catch fire in noxious blazes that last for days. ((per the article, these trash mountains are a major national embarrassment -nmmi))
The government pushed a revolutionary plan. It promised to incinerate the trash safely in a state-of-the-art plant, turning the waste into electricity in an ingenious bid to tackle two major problems at once.
...
The plant was never regulated, and the government knows, Rakesh Kumar Aggarwal, a former manager at the plant, told The Times before he died in 2020, months after we started reporting this article and collecting samples for testing. He said basic safety measures were routinely skipped to save money and emissions from the facility went untreated, spewing dangerous chemicals into the heart of Delhi.
... And despite rules that prohibit the ash from being dumped in residential areas, open-bed trucks often bearing the Delhi municipal governments logo have carted thousands of tons of incinerated trash to poorer neighborhoods on the capitals outskirts for years. The wind kicks up their uncovered loads along the way.
Many of the trucks have climbed to the top of a knoll overlooking hundreds of homes, a playground and a Hindu temple. From there, the soot has come hurtling down toward the neighborhood below in black clouds, seeping into homes and settling like a gritty blanket that coats just about everything floors, laundry, groceries, childrens toys.
More:
https://www.msn.com/en-us/money/companies/is-a-green-revolution-poisoning-india-s-capital/ar-AA1tMydb
There was so much metal that impoverished families, known locally as ragpickers, sorted through the ash to salvage whatever they could, retching on the fumes as they worked. ... (the plant is supposed to sort out and remove metal, electronics, batteries, and other materials that cause toxic fumes, before incinerating the remainder, but per the article they don't bother).
While protests were once common against the plant, the government has clamped down on all demonstrations in Delhi in recent years.