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Home / Environment / Residents Accuse Jindal of Misleading Approval for Waste-to-Energy Plant

Residents Accuse Jindal of Misleading Approval for Waste-to-Energy Plant

19 Oct

•

Summary

  • Residents claim Jindal Group obtained environmental clearance through false information
  • Proposed plant violates pollution control guidelines on buffer zones
  • Residents allege public hearing process was flawed and ignored their concerns
Residents Accuse Jindal of Misleading Approval for Waste-to-Energy Plant

According to the article, residents of Sanoth village in northwest Delhi's Bawana have filed a petition before the National Green Tribunal (NGT), alleging that the Jindal Group's 30 MW waste-to-energy plant was approved based on "false and misleading information".

The Jindal Urban Waste Management (Bawana) Ltd plant is a public-private partnership with the Municipal Corporation of Delhi (MCD) and is set to process 3,000 tonnes of municipal solid waste per day. However, the residents claim that agents of the company "deliberately concealed information and provided misleading information" during the approval process.

The petition further alleges that residents of the nearby JJ Colony were misled into signing letters that were presented as public consent, without being informed about the potential health and environmental impacts of the plant. Additionally, the site is located within 500 meters of dense human habitation, violating pollution control guidelines.

The residents have been protesting against the project since last year, and they claim the public hearing process was flawed, with their requests to postpone the hearing being ignored. They allege the presentation was inaudible, their opportunities to object were "severely curtailed", and many were unable to submit written representations.

The matter is now scheduled for a hearing at the NGT on November 19, 2025.

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 residents have accused the Jindal Group of obtaining environmental clearance for their 30 MW waste-to-energy plant through "false and misleading information".
According to the petition, agents of the company "deliberately concealed information and provided misleading information" to residents of the nearby JJ Colony, who were made to sign letters presented as public consent without being informed about the potential health and environmental impacts.
The residents claim the plant site is located within 500 meters of dense human habitation, violating pollution control guidelines, and that the public hearing process was flawed, with their requests to postpone the hearing being ignored.

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