Mumbai Is Overflowing with Garbage

88m3

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by Bhuma ShrivastavaAnto Antony
July 26, 2015 — 7:00 PM EDT

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Boys play as cows graze through garbage at the Deonar landfill site in Mumbai. Photographer: Dhiraj Singh/Bloomberg


Which global city uses prime real estate nearly the size of New York’s Central Park simply to dump trash on?

Mumbai.

The land-starved peninsula currently discards 11,000 metric tons of refuse every day in three dump yards that together occupy more than 740 acres. At going market rates, that land would be worth as much as $4.4 billion if it were sold and used for housing. Meanwhile, 6.5 million people, or half of Mumbai’s population, live in slums without basic sanitation and safe drinking water.


Mumbai’s landfills underscore the need to put scarce resources to optimal use if Prime Minister Narendra Modi is going to succeed in his goal of building everyone a home by 2022. He aims to create 100 smart cities while tidying up the country under his Swachh Bharat Abhiyaan, which translates as Clean India Mission.

“Dump yard redevelopment is very crucial,” said Anshuman Magazine, chairman at realty consultancy CBRE South Asia Ltd. “The only way to check prices in Mumbai is by increasing supply. There is no other magic to it.”

An average Indian would need to work for three centuries to pay for a luxury home in Mumbai, a study by Knight Frank LLP had found by comparing home costs with average annual incomes, making it the least affordable city in the world for locals. Shanghai buyers would need 233 years, according to the latest-available study in 2012.

Affordability Gap
“Housing in Mumbai is more of an affordability gap than scarcity per se,” said Ashutosh Limaye, Jones Lang LaSalle India’s national director of research.

Half of Mumbai households earn less than 20,000 rupees ($313) a month, a report by the non-profit Praja Foundation and supported by the Ford Foundation had found in November. The state agency is so slow in building homes for the poor, the study said, that it would take 140 years to provide for all.

Meanwhile the Deonar dump site, Asia’s biggest and arguably oldest that opened in 1927, sits on 326 acres in eastern Mumbai and takes half of the city’s daily refuse. Itstrash mountain is so high it could bury the White House -- twice over.

A smaller landfill in Mulund occupies about 62 acres while a 353-acre one is further north in Kanjurmarg. Initially on the outskirts of Mumbai, the landfills over time got incorporated into the city limits and now occupy expensive, strategic real estate.

According to land prices provided by an annual state government estimate, these sites could be worth as much as $4.4 billion combined.

Steep Discount
Yet the land, if redeveloped, must price in a steep discount, as it would take years of cleanup and land preparation before anything could be built on it, said Jones Lang LaSalle’s Limaye.

Rustomjee Group, a real estate developer with more than 10 million square feet of completed projects across Mumbai, skipped opportunities in Mulund and Deonar, despite the areas’ connectivity to the downtown area by rail and highway.

“We consciously stayed away as we believe it is unhealthy ground, and living close to that will cause nothing but pain and heartache for the people,” said Boman Irani, Rustomjee’s chairman.

The office of Rajendra Wale, deputy municipal commissioner at the Municipal Corporation of Greater Mumbai, said Wale declined to comment.

Polluted School
Dump yards contaminate air and leach into the water table, making life hard for those who live close by.

A state-run primary school across the road from Deonar dump resorted to having municipal water tankers bring in drinking water a few months ago. The tap water became yellow and smelly, said a teacher at Gayak Rafi Nagar Urdu Municipal school where 700 students ages five through 13 attend.

Many children accompany their parents into the dump to pick through the waste and scavenge for recyclables to sell. They frequently get boils, sores and respiratory ailments, the teacher said, refusing to be identified as he is a municipal employee not authorized to speak to the media. Every student is given a tetanus shot once a year as a precaution, he said.

Nawab Ali Shaikh, a sponge recycler on the fringes of the Deonar landfill, takes these injections several times a year. The 62-year-old separates sponge sheets from the mixed waste he buys from the landfill and often pricks himself with a needle or glass shard.

Keeps Happening
“It keeps happening,” said Shaikh holding up the bandaged index finger of his right hand while cutting sponge, mostly from cushions inside discarded furniture, into tiny cubes that get sold to local toymakers as stuffing material.

He has seen fires blaze for days as combustible gases spew from disintegrating garbage and cover Deonar in smog. And he has swept out blackened water that enters his one-room shanty during monsoons. Shaikh wants the landfill redeveloped even if it means shuttering his recycling business.

“At least I will breathe clean air and won’t have to pick out needles from the garbage,” he said.

Most Indian households don’t separate garbage for recycling. What reaches the landfill is a mix of kitchen refuse, plastic, glass, paper, metal and construction debris, requiring hundreds of waste pickers to trawl through it. Separated garbage would result in less mass and require less space.

Redeveloping dump yards wouldn’t just free up space to build homes, it would mean more roads, parks or hospitals in a city with already-burdened infrastructure.

The real challenge in redeveloping dump yards, according to CBRE’s Magazine, is the “huge upfront capital” needed to clean the land, make it safe for habitation and then build sewage, water and electricity lines. The government could start by offering it to developers at low rates, he said.

“Basically there should be enough incentive, enough margin of profit, for a developer to really go after this,” he said, pointing to Mumbai’s sporadic success at slum redevelopment. “It shows that when you get to clean up and sell, there is a market out there.”

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/artic...affordable-homes-in-land-starved-mumbaiMumbai Is Overflowing with Garbage


Sounds pretty epic
 

unit321

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Maybe one day they will make a particle accelerator so we can turn this garbage into energy
Other cities have this problem. They don't have the money to build an incinerator/generator. That would be the quick and easy fix, but the air pollution would be a problem.
 

unit321

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Well then I guess they need a Vaporizer.
The idea of burning garbage and reusing the heat to generate steam energy to propel an electric generator that would power a water desalination plant would be an ideal situation for India. They could use the water from the Indian Ocean to desalinate ocean water for city-use. And, they have so much garbage, it would be a perpetual burning incinerator.
 

88m3

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The idea of burning garbage and reusing the heat to generate steam energy to propel an electric generator that would power a water desalination plant would be an ideal situation for India. They could use the water from the Indian Ocean to desalinate ocean water for city-use. And, they have so much garbage, it would be a perpetual burning incinerator.

sounds perfect
 

joeychizzle

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how hasn't some weird ass plague wiped that place out yet?
God level resistance to most forms of bacteria and pathogens, owing to the often highly below par standards of living compared to the rest of the world. :troll:

In all honesty though, they should set up a system to remove, categorize and recycle/ burn the trash for energy purposes. All that trash could power a lot of homes cheaply and efficiently, if the levels of trash really are that high.

edit: @unit321 beat me to it already :wow:
 

88m3

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God level resistance to most forms of bacteria and pathogens, owing to the often highly below par standards of living compared to the rest of the world.

In all honesty though, they should set up a system to remove, categorize and recycle/ burn the trash for energy purposes. All that trash could power a lot of homes cheaply and efficiently, if the levels of trash really are that high.

edit: @unit321 beat me to it already :wow:


I assumed the same
 

Mr. Somebody

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The idea of burning garbage and reusing the heat to generate steam energy to propel an electric generator that would power a water desalination plant would be an ideal situation for India. They could use the water from the Indian Ocean to desalinate ocean water for city-use. And, they have so much garbage, it would be a perpetual burning incinerator.
Let's create a business and find some investors and get it built friend.

We have the solution like coffee and sugar
 
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Mr. Somebody

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God level resistance to most forms of bacteria and pathogens, owing to the often highly below par standards of living compared to the rest of the world. :troll:

In all honesty though, they should set up a system to remove, categorize and recycle/ burn the trash for energy purposes. All that trash could power a lot of homes cheaply and efficiently, if the levels of trash really are that high.

edit: @unit321 beat me to it already :wow:
Actually friend I beat u to it but let's give credit to god for being such an inspirational force
 

unit321

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Let's create a business olan find sime investorsomething and get it built friend.

We have the solution like coffee and sugar
I have no real means to get funding.
I'm pretty sure we would be hailed as heroes in India and win a Nobel Peace prize. Of course, I would take my cut of the milly and buy a gas guzzling Lambo, but that's another story.
 

Mr. Somebody

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I have no real means to get funding.
I'm pretty sure we would be hailed as heroes in India and win a Nobel Peace prize. Of course, I would take my cut of the milly and buy a gas guzzling Lambo, but that's another story.
I'll open a jujitsu academy in Africa
 
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