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Home / Environment / Yamuna's Dirty Secret: Sewage Overload Chokes River

Yamuna's Dirty Secret: Sewage Overload Chokes River

28 Jan

Summary

  • Untreated sewage remains the primary polluter of the Yamuna River.
  • Industrial waste and solid waste dumping significantly worsen water quality.
  • Coordination failures among seven agencies impede Yamuna rejuvenation efforts.
Yamuna's Dirty Secret: Sewage Overload Chokes River

Sewage overload, industrial effluents, and solid waste have been identified as the primary culprits behind the Yamuna River's worsening water quality. A high-level meeting chaired by CM Rekha Gupta highlighted the persistent gap between sewage generation and effective treatment, with many sewage treatment plants (STPs) not meeting new standards. Officials noted that incomplete sewer connectivity and underutilized treatment infrastructure allow large volumes of untreated wastewater to enter the river.

Industrial pollution adds to the crisis, compounded by the absence of a comprehensive waste management framework at the sub-drain level. A structural issue exacerbating the problem is the lack of fresh water flow during dry seasons, allowing numerous drains to discharge wastewater into the river with minimal dilution. Furthermore, the management of Delhi's extensive stormwater drain network by seven different agencies has led to coordination failures, uneven maintenance, and accountability gaps.

Solid waste, including construction debris and cow dung, dumped into drains significantly increases the organic load, raising biochemical oxygen demand levels. The Yamuna's 48km stretch through Delhi accounts for approximately 80% of its total pollution. Efforts are underway to address these issues by accelerating sewer network completion, strengthening STP operations, intercepting drains, and improving industrial waste management. Plans also include regular desilting, preventing waste dumping, ensuring environmental flow, and enhancing coordination across agencies.

Disclaimer: This story has been auto-aggregated and auto-summarised by a computer program. This story has not been edited or created by the Feedzop team.
The main causes of Yamuna River pollution include untreated sewage, industrial effluents, solid waste dumping, and a lack of fresh water flow, compounded by coordination failures among managing agencies.
Untreated and partially treated sewage enters the Yamuna through drains due to incomplete sewer connectivity and underutilized treatment plants, significantly increasing pollution and lowering water quality.
Measures include accelerating sewer network completion, strengthening sewage treatment, intercepting drains, improving industrial waste management, regular desilting, and enhancing coordination among agencies.

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