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The Commission set up by the National Green Tribunal (NGT) to determine the extent of damage in Bellandur and Varthur lakes in Bengaluru has submitted a scathing and explosive report.
The Commission, in its report severely objurgated authorities’ in charge of Bellandur lake and said, “Apparently, the biggest lake of the beautiful city of Bengaluru by sheer callousness and indifference of the authorities has become the largest septic tank of the city.”
The Commission noted that the Bellandur Lake has “rapidly shrunk” due to “indiscriminate dumping of construction and demolition waste, municipal solid waste and due to vast spread of hydrophyte and microphytes in the lake water”.
“An approximate area of 2 acres and 25.08 guntas has been encroached by DRDO under the category of Government Encroachment. We have also been apprised that an approximate area of 4 acres and 02.08 guntas is under private encroachment,” the report adds.
As per the Commission, the water storage capacity of the lake in 1973 was 18.67 ml cubic metres and the capacity currently stands at a mere 5.50ml cubic metres. The remaining 13.16ml cubic metres of storage capacity now consists of 6.60 ml sediment deposits and 6.56 ml cubic metres of slush deposits.
The ultra-utility of the lake, and its storage capacity, has diminished by 71.45%, says a report by the Indian Institute of Science.
“The factors, namely sediments, slush deposits and hydrophytes, which led to this man-created catastrophe has been subsequently enumerated extensively in the report,” the Commission stated.
According to the report, the Bellandur Lake has caught fire 12 times since the first incident on 12 August, 2016.
According to a report submitted by the Fire Department and the Karnataka State Remote Sensing Applications Centre to the Commission, 53.16 acre of Bellandur Lake has suffered burn due to fire. The Central Pollution Control Board (CPCB) has submitted that high oil and grease values in Bellandur Lake amounting to 24.27mg/l.
“It is because it has been accumulating over the years. This oil and grease, when it sticks to hyacinth and dried grass, results in conducive material for fire and smoke,” the report adds.
The Commission also concluded that the spontaneous combustion of the accumulated methane is not the cause for the fire as the area has never witnessed the required increase in temperature for methane to combust (537 degrees Fahrenheit).
The Commission is of the opinion that the fire was a result of an accidental spark or that it was deliberately set off.
The Commission noted that 60 percent of the 366 hectares of lake area was covered with water hyacinth.
The pace of de-weeding was so slow that the hyacinth would grow back in no time.
But it’s also that huge mounds of de-weeded hyacinth had been dumped along with domestic waste material like plastic on the site itself and that the de-weeded hyacinth was not being converted to compost in a scientific manner.
De-weeded mounds of garbage are being passed off as compost and dumped at the lake site.
Upon inquiry, the Commission found that no organisation or government agency is willing to accept those mounds.
“15-20 feet deep pits are made in the lake bed within the boundary of the lake. The said compost along with its solid waste is dumped into the pit and then covered with excavated earth. Shockingly, the excavated earth for creation of pits for composting was to a large extent nothing but construction and demolition waste,” the report states.
“There cannot be a greater farce than the alleged removal of hyacinth and disposal of the so-called compost on which lakhs and lakhs of precious public money is being diverted,” it adds.
The report states that approximately 22,000 cubic metres of construction and demolition debris has been dumped in the past.
In addition, substantial amount of Municipal Solid Waste had been piled up at the outlet points of the Rajakaluve into Bellandur Lake.
The report states the presence of 6.56 million cubic metres (MCM) of slush deposit, 6.606 MCM of sediment deposit and 1700 Kg per cubic metre of bulk density sediments were present in the lake.
There are totally 17 inlets into Bellandur Lake. Of these only two of them carry treated water into the lake and five of them carry sewage. The remaining 10 are dry during the non-monsoon period.
“The Commission however observed that unfortunately the directions by this Hon'be Tribunal to correct the mischief have not been complied with in letter and spirit since the untreated effluent and sewage indiscriminately continues to pollute the lakes,” the report adds.
According to the report, the sewage from the Koramangala SWD amounts to 83 MLD, 80 MLD from the Agara SWD.
In addition to this, 11 MLD from the HAL SWD, 5.6 MLD from the Iblur SWD and 3.4 MLD from the Kempapura SWD.
(This article was originally published on The News Minute and has been republished with permission.)
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