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The two-member monitoring committee, comprising retired National Green Tribunal expert member B S Sajwan and former Delhi chief secretary Shailaja Chandra, made this suggestion in a second supplementary report submitted to the green panel recently.
“Of the 459 million gallons of wastewater generated per day by the Delhi Jal Board (DJB), only 89 MGD is being used. The common effluent treatment plants of the Delhi State Industrial and Infrastructure Development Corporation utilize less than 10 per cent of the treated effluent,” the report said.
It said that after a visit to the Okhla sewage treatment plant, the monitoring committee told the DJB that the treated effluent of excellent quality, which could be used effectively for other purposes, was being discharged into the Agra canal.
The committee has repeatedly stated that all potential users of treated effluent are needed to be identified in a radius of 5 kilometers around each STP, adding that the DJB should enforce the use of treated water, and regulate groundwater and borewell connections in public parks and departmentally-owned green spaces.
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“The only way to compel large organizations such as the Delhi Development Authority, railways, malls, and farmhouses to stop using borewell water is if they are forced to close the borewells and switch over to treated wastewater available at several STPs… to be collected by tankers for non-potable purposes,” it said.
The DJB is also working on a plan to reuse treated wastewater after releasing it into the Yamuna. But, according to officials, that will take time.
“Treated wastewater will be released into the Yamuna near Palla, where the river enters the city. Downstream, we will draw the river water and send it to a water treatment plant for further treatment,” DJB vice-chairman Dinesh Mohaniya had said earlier.
Manoj Mishra, convenor of Yamuna Jiye Abhiyan, said reuse of treated wastewater needs to become the norm and stringent measures are required to check exploitation of groundwater.
“The DJB’s plan to release treated wastewater into the Yamuna near Palla is for the future. At present, it can regulate its bulk supply of water to these large institutions, forcing them to use treated wastewater for non-potable purposes,” he said.