Skip to main content

Occupational hazard? 88.3% waste pickers aren't equipped to deal with landfill burns

Bhalaswa landfill site
The extreme rise in heat in the National Capital has led to yet another climate induced disaster. This time it was the Bhalaswa landfill. A massive fire broke out on April 26, 2022 afternoon between 1 and 2 pm. Yet this was not an isolated incident. This was the 4th major fire in Delhi-NCR. According to data by Delhi Fire Service, there have been four fire incidents in Ghazipur, three in Bhalaswa and two in Okhla this year.
Consequences on waste pickers of such disasters haven’t yet been gauged. In December 2021, Chintan Environmental Research and Action Group conducted a survey on climate induced disasters with the waste picker communities. As many as 80.9% waste pickers said that they faced occupational hazard during landfill fires as well as health issues.
A media monitoring exercise by Chintan, known to be an elite non-profit NGO, claiming to work in the field of sustainability and environmental justice for the past 20 years, indicated landfill fires to be a regular disaster: 80% waste pickers stated it to be the most commonly occurring disaster.
The Chintan study says, as summer arrives with great intensity, higher temperatures cause organic matter present in the waste to decompose more rapidly, thereby emitting greater quantities of methane. 
Apart from putting landfill workers and those residing around it at direct risk of losing life, income and property, such waste-dump fires, also worsens Delhi’s air quality. The smog and toxic fumes have both short-term and long-term impacts on the respiratory system and has carcinogenic elements.
Fires at landfill sites reported by waste pickers
The respondents from the Chintan survey reported that toxic fumes lead to difficulty in breathing. Emissions from the landfill not only pose a threat to the health of those who live and work around the landfill but are a huge contributor to climate change.
According to the “Chintan Report on Disasters Faced by Waste Pickers, 2021”, an actionable solution is diverting wastes from landfills and reducing the dump. Segregation of waste is key to achieving this. Organic waste can be segregated from dry waste and composted. Not only will this reduce the waste going to landfill, it will also be a driving source of manure to nourish plants and crops.
Balmukund Kumar, coordinator of the Safai Sena, a waste-pickers' collective in Delhi, says, “Six jhuggis (informal settlements) of waste pickers along with their collected recyclable materials, ration, clothes, and other household materials have become ashes. Only documents could be saved. Waste-pickers who work at the landfill have lost a month's worth of segregated recyclables.”
Adds Kumar, “More than 170 waste-picker families have suffered a loss of income. One woman waste picker got minor injuries last night while trying to save her segregated waste. The fire was still rampant on Wednesday morning, and families living at the base of the landfill in kachha jhuggies (informal settlements) are at the risk of catching fire. People are scared and are splashing water since Tuesday night to save their homes..”
Workers equipped to deal with landfill fires
Believes Shruti Sinha, manager, Policy and Outreach, Chintan, which won the US Innovation Award by the former Secretary of State, Hillary Clinton, the United Nations Climate Solutions Award in 2015, and the FICCI Women Icon Award by the President of India in 2018, “This is climate change and its only going to get worse. And who gets impacted the most? Waste pickers working on the landfill. Children living the informal settlements around the landfill. Women on whom the burden of injury, loss of home and incomes fall.”
She adds, “These are frontline communities. We are experiencing one of the hottest summers in Delhi. When heat and heaps of mixed wastes come together- such a disaster become common. Solution? Segregate waste, compost your wet waste and divert wastes from landfills.”
Sinha further states, “Landfill fires aren’t the only disaster. Parts of landfill also collapse regularly. Chintan survey reports that 56.4% waste pickers have been impacted by such collapses. Do they feel equipped to deal with such disasters? 88.3% of them report that they feel in-equipped to deal with such occurrences. So, segregation is key, and so is disaster management training for at risk workers apart from responsive policy measures that can prevent such disaster from occurring and reducing its impact”.

Comments

TRENDING

Policy Bazaar seems to think, not Right to Education but insurance ensures a kid's school admission

While frequent advertisements on TV are extremely jarring, I was a little amused while watching a Policy Bazaar-sponsored advertisement. The advisement by one of India's most well-known online insurance brokers sees a woman asking a kid entering the house why he hasn't been to school. The kid enters in with a bag full of vegetables in his hand which he presumably bought in the market at a time he should have been in the school.

Has Gujarat missed the Artificial Intelligence bus like it missed the IT bus in 1990s?

Has Gujarat missed the Artificial Intelligence (AI) bus as it did the Information Technology (IT) bus in the 1990s despite claiming to be an industrial powerhouse sought to be promoted by none other than Prime Minister Narendra Modi? It would seem so if the latest study by the Indian Institute of Management-Ahmedabad (IIM-A) "Labour-force Perception about AI: A Study on Indian White-collar Workers" is any indication.

Addressing caste discrimination in US higher education: Rutgers report sparks controversy

In a surprise move, an American university has published a "controversial" report titled "Caste-Based Discrimination in US Higher Education and at Rutgers". The report has sparked debate, as no sooner was it released than an Indian diaspora advocacy group, CasteFiles, filed a complaint against Rutgers University and Prof. Audrey Truschke, co-chair of the task force that prepared the report. The complaint, filed under Title VI of the US Civil Rights Act of 1964, alleges violations of the right to education free from harassment and discrimination.

Majority white collar workers fear job loss as AI grows at CAGR of 25-35% in India

An Indian Institute of Management-Ahmedabad (IIM-A) study, "Labour-force Perception about AI: A Study on Indian White-collar Workers", has revealed that as many as 60% of white collar workers fear job loss as a result of artificial intelligence (IA) being introduced in Indian industry, while only 53% "hope" that new jobs will be created.

Modi govt distancing from Adanis? MoEFCC 'defers' 1500 MW project in Western Ghats

Is the Narendra Modi government, in its third but  what would appear to be a weaker avatar, seeking to show that it would keep a distance, albeit temporarily, from its most favorite business house, the Adanis? It would seem so if the latest move of the Ministry of Environment, Forests and Climate Change (MoEFCC) latest to "defer" the Adani Energy’s application for 1500 MW Warasgaon-Warangi Pump Storage Project is any indication. Quoting the September 27 MoEFCC's Expert Appraisal Committee (EAC) meeting,  released on October 2, a senior scholar-activist of the top environmental advocacy group South Asia Network on Dams, Rivers and People (SANDRP) has  reported  that in a "respite" to forest dwelling communities, fragile biodiversity and community conservation areas, the EAC has "rejected" the Adani application for project. However, the window for continuing with the controversial project hasn't been entirely closed. To quote Parineeta Dandekar, the ...

NHRC failing to 'effectively address' human rights violations: NGO groups tell UN-linked body

In a joint submission to the Global Alliance of National Human Rights Institutions' (GANHRI's) Sub Committee on Accreditation (SCA), two civil society groups -- All India Network of NGOs and Individuals working with National and State Human Rights Institutions (AiNNI) and Asian NGO Network on National Human Rights Institutions (ANNI) --  have said that the  National Human Rights Commission's (NHRC's) accreditation, deferred in  2016, 2023, and 2024, fails to find space on its website. In their submission to the top global body which coordinates the relationship between NHRIs and the United Nations human rights system, AiNNI and ANNI said, the accreditation status of NHRC "has not been updated" since 2017, and as of September 21, 2024, the "website falsely states that the NHRC has retained its 'A' accreditation status from SCA for four consecutive five-year terms." They added, such omission diminishes "civil society's trust" in N...

Two persons with old typewriters off SLC's fashionable street, writing poems on postcards!

A few days back, after taking a round of beautiful hills surrounding Salt Lake City (SLC), we drove down to a popular, somewhat fashionable spot -- Harvey Milk Blvd -- not very far from the Down Town. We visited a few shops, where mainly souvenirs were being sold, and also a few sex toys! Finally, we visited an ice cream parlour, where we tasted Italian ice cream. It is a well decorated parlour, with different coloured lovely goodies  hanging across the restaurant. I took a lemon flavoured ice cream -- really liked it. The parlour is called Dolcetti Gelato. Thereafter, while returning to take the car, we found two persons sitting on outdoor chairs, with old manual typewriters on makeshift tables. They were typing out exactly the same way I used to in 1980s to do my stories before faxing them from Moscow to Patriot office in Delhi.