Skip to main content

Holy dip in Sabarmati? Ahmedabad industrial units discharge wastewater despite notice

The fair at Vautha
In a sharp admission, the Gujarat government has said that most of the industrial units of Ahmedabad, as also the city's residential houses, discharge waste water in Sabarmati, polluting the river. Notably, the river’s 11 kilometre stretch in Ahmedabad, where the riverfront has been beautified, is sought to be projected as a model for the country as a whole.
In a notice to all the Common Effluent Treatment Plants (CETPs), which discharges waste water, allegedly without proper treatment, the state government’s pollution watchdog, Gujarat Pollution Control Board (GPCB) has said they should stop discharging through their mega pipelines into Sabarmati between November 8 and November 12, as it would “endanger the health of lakhs of devotees taking holy dip in the downstream at village Vautha.”
The notice, signed by BT Shah, GPCB in-charge, Ahmedabad (East), even as claiming that the waste water is discharged “after being cleaned”, wants CETPs to stop the discharge during the period as a major fair would take place during four days, when “lakhs of devotees would take a holy dip at the spot where seven rivers, Sabarmati being one of them, merge.”

Discharge into Sabarmati
Mahesh Pandya, director, Paryavaran Mitra, Gujarat’s top environmental body, even as making public the GPCB letter, said, citing facts he has dug out from official sources, “Despite the GPCB Ahmedabad’s CETPs have refused to oblige, instead continued to discharge waste water ever since midnight of November 7-8.”
Citing a factsheet of the CETP of the Vatva industrial area of Ahmedabad, set up by the Green Environment Cooperative Society Ltd (GECSL), a public-private partnership unit, Pandya said, the discharge of the “treated” effluent has continued to be sent into Sabarmati through its mega pipeline. “Notably, the Comptroller and Auditor General’s (CAG’s) Gujarat reports have repeatedly drawn attention in detail about non performing of CETPs”, he added.

Comments

TRENDING

DigiLocker's 'mismatch' problem: When technology defies government policy

  DigiLocker has been functioning in rather strange ways, at least in my experience over the past year. For quite some time now, I have been trying to retrieve various documents from the Government of India's official app, but every attempt ends with an inexplicable "mismatch" error. I even lodged a complaint through its official email ID, explaining that I was unable to retrieve or download essential documents such as my PAN card , driving licence, and the registration certificates of my car and scooter. The response has remained the same: the system refuses access on the grounds of a so-called mismatch.

Caste, class, and Patidar agitation: Veteran academic 'unearths' Gujarat’s social history

Recently, I was talking with a veteran Gujarat-based academic who is the author of several books, including "Social Movements in India: A Review of Literature", "Untouchability in Rural India", "Public Health and Urban Development: The Study of Surat Plague", and "Dalit Identity and Politics", apart from many erudite articles and papers in research and popular journals.

'Rethink' Kalpasar, 'end civil engineering mindset' in Gujarat's water strategy

Prof. Vidyut Joshi, a prominent sociologist and one of the leading protagonists of the mega Narmada dam project, has raised critical questions regarding the viability of Gujarat’s ambitious Kalpasar project. Writing in the Gujarati daily Sandesh under the headline "Let us consider alternatives scientifically for the Kalpasar project," Joshi argues that rather than remaining trapped in a "civil engineering mindset" focused solely on constructing massive dams, the state must pivot to modern, sustainable, and technologically viable alternatives to quench the thirst of the arid Saurashtra region.