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Gurgaon, The Shopping Mall City of India, is on Brink of Collapse

DHANANJAY JHA

 

 

 

A growing water demand-supply mismatch, parched taps in summers, slush-laden roads of monsoons, unending dark stretches and an obscene amount of garbage consuming the city as one gigantic slum.

To say that Gurgaon is staring at an impending civic infrastructure catastrophe would be an understatement.

Influx of migrants, lack of any futuristic vision and over-drawing of resources has descended Gurgaon into chaos.

A survey has revealed that around 40% residents are not satisfied with the civic standards of the city.

Kavita Munjal, a teacher, is one such resident. Hoping to lead a comfortable life, Munjal had bought a residential plot in DLF Phase 3 in 1999.

But thanks to severe water crises and sanitation problems, Munjal had to leave the plush locality and shift to Tatvam Villa, an upscale gated locality at Sohna Road.

"When we decided to shift to India in 1998 from Malaysia, we chose Gurgaon over Delhi. After 14 years of struggle, we were finally forced to shift to a gated locality where basic amenities such as water and power are taken care of through generators and groundwater extraction," said Munjal.

Like her, scores of people have shifted homes in search of an abode that doesn't have any civic problems.

Though it has been tagged the Millennium City, Gurgaon has time and again failed to meet any of the parameters that signify good living standards.

‘DROWNING IN ITS OWN EXCRETA’

According to a Centre for Science and Environment ("CSE") report, Gurgaon will 'drown in its own excreta' by 2021.

[‘Excreta’, for those who do not know Latin, is the polite term for ‘shit‘.]

The 2012 report - “Excreta Matters” - has thrown some startling revelations. The most frightening being that the city will generate 533 million litres of sewage by 2021, but its capacity to treat waste water will fall short at 255MLD.

Currently, the city generates 450 metric tonnes of solid waste per day. The MCG data, however, has been termed as a 'lie' by the residents.

"The 450 metric tonnes figure is a lie. The city generates 1,200 tonnes of waste. The present waste management system is not equipped to tackle the menace," said RS Rathee, member of residents' body.

In an interactive session conducted by HT earlier this month, residents termed the Bandhwari solid waste plant a "complete failure".

"The plant is running under-capacity. Waste is being accumulated in the Aravalli like a landfill, contaminating the water," said a junior engineer of the Faridabad Municipal Corporation.

The Municipal Corporation of Gurgaon (MCG) currently employs 1,500 sanitation workers while the city requires at least 3,500 workers. Moreover, it does not have dumpers to transport waste from the city to the plant site despite an annual budget of Rs. 50 crore.

"We have asked the developer of the Bandhwari plant to double its capacity from 600 to 1,200 tonnes/day," said Sumit Dhankhar, medical officer, MCG.

WATER & POWER SHORTAGE

The CSE report has also revealed that with a projected population of 3.7 million by 2021, Gurgaon will have water demand of 666 million litres per day (MLD) but it will be able to generate only 573MLD water.

The city currently requires 110MGD water. However, the Haryana Urban Development Authority (Huda) -- the sole canal water supplying agency - is supplying only 55MGD. While drinking water is sourced from canals and make for 62% of supply, the secondary source of groundwater extraction is causing water-table depletion at the rate of 250 metre per year.

"How does Huda plans to feed people by 2021? The 60MGD Basai water plant is running under capacity while the new 110MGD plant at Chandubudhera is not functional," said RS Rathee, a resident. 

However, former Huda chief engineer Pankaj Kumra claims the Chandubudhera plant will be able to supply 66MGD water by 2016.

The power scenario is no better.

Gurgaon's current per day power demand is 1,500MW while the Dakshin Haryana Bijli Vitaran Nigam (DHBVN) is able to supply just 900MW- 1,100MW per day - resulting in long power cuts in this sweltering heat.

"We are ready to pay extra for electricity. Like Delhi, we want the government to invite private players for power distribution here as well," said TN Kaul, a resident of Ardee City.

Commercial and technical losses, thefts, short-circuits, outdated infrastructure -- all lead to erratic power supply, forcing residents to take to the streets every summer.

TRAFFIC

"The government just focuses on the expressway and does not have any traffic management plans for local commuters. Inadequate traffic signals and lack of road signages is a major problem," said Rohit Baluja, president, Institute of Road Traffic Education (IRTE), Delhi.

Some major roads in the city such as Gurgaon-Faridabad expressway, Golf Course, Sikandarpur-Golf Course road, Palam Vihar-Sector 5 road are badly lit and do not have traffic signals.

"We have a plan to install 3,000 LCD lights on all major roads," said Arun Dhankhar, executive engineer, Huda.


[With input from Charumathi Sankaran and Badri Chatterjee. Courtesy: Hindustan Times. Edited for sikhchic.com]
May 15, 2013

 

Conversation about this article

1: Sid Golding (New York, USA), May 15, 2013, 3:53 AM.

Want to invest in India? Sure ... as badly as I need a hole in the head!

2: Gurmeet Kaur (Liverpool, United Kingdom), May 15, 2013, 4:08 AM.

Bangalore is already a hell-hole. Now Gurgaon! India - one big slum ... always a big slum. Always will be. The consolation prize for desis: there's lots of Slumdog Millionaires. There ... they can now be as happy as pigs in shit!

3: Jane Digby (Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada), May 15, 2013, 4:24 AM.

Okay, quickly ... can someone, any one, give me one good reason any one should risk his life to visit India nowadays? That is, someone like me, who doesn't HAVE to go ... I'm not from there, no nostalgia draws me, no relatives to see ... Yeah. I know. Lots of nice and old, really O-L-D stuff to see. I would like that. But I don't want to go to a hell-hole to do that. Nor do I want to pour my hard-earned dollars into a corrupt country so that a handful of fat-cats can get even fatter.

4: Aman (New Jersey, USA), May 15, 2013, 4:33 AM.

If you really love India, then boycott it. Invest in Punjab, directly in local projects that benefit the common man, or stay away from the sub-continent altogether. Go travel elsewhere! See the world!

5: Kanwarjeet Singh (USA), May 15, 2013, 11:04 AM.

Not sure why people are so surprised by this story or any such story about India! Have you all not heard India's slogan, 'Sub chalta hai!' - In India, "everything goes!"

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