India’s Ghazipur landfill went ablaze overnight due to massive methane emissions, local media reported Read Full Article at RT.com

The Ghazipur landfill east of the Indian capital is considered one of the largest and most hazardous dumping sites in the country

The Ghazipur landfill site in New Delhi, known as India’s ‘mount of shame’ or the ‘Mount Everest of trash,’ caught fire on Sunday evening, local media have reported.

At least eight fire brigades were called to the scene to battle the blaze with the help of five excavators from the Municipal Corporation of Delhi (MCD).

Footage posted online overnight showed one side of the massive dump site completely engulfed in flames.

According to reports, the fire broke out at the rear end of the landfill, adjacent to a fish market where a new pop-up dumping ground recently appeared. Numerous residents living close to the site complained of respiratory problems due to thick smoke that engulfed the area from the blaze.

According to Delhi Deputy Mayor Aaley Mohammad Iqbal, the fire may have been caused by heat and dry weather. However, the Delhi Fire Service reported that methane gas generated within the gigantic trash pile was more likely the cause of the blaze. The greenhouse gas, produced by decaying organic waste, is extremely flammable.

Just drove past a terrible fire engulfing the Ghazipur landfill! Such fire outbreaks are hard to contain and bring into focus the systemic failure of our waste management policies and practices. pic.twitter.com/Aq5JOPQjqO

— Jayant Singh (@jayantrld) April 21, 2024

Authorities have launched a probe into the incident.

Reports from the area early on Monday claimed the fire had been largely brought under control but was still burning in several locations, with the most recent footage from the site showing dense columns of smoke erupting from the landfill.

The smoke billowing from the massive fire at the #Ghazipur landfill is sparking a wave of panic among those living nearby#GhazipurLandfillFire #Ghazipur pic.twitter.com/Q22axccEuw

— Syed Hasan Imam Zaidi (@Syed_1109084) April 22, 2024

The Ghazipur landfill, commissioned by the Delhi government in 1984, is the oldest dump site in the capital, and is considered to be its largest, spread over roughly 300,000 square meters. It has been a longstanding environmental concern, ever since it reached its capacity back in 2002, due to methane emissions and other harmful gasses, which have caused respiratory problems and other health issues among the people living nearby.

#Ghazipur#GhazipurLandfillFire
गाजीपुर लैंडफिल की फोटो दिखाकर केजरीवाल ने MCD का चुनाव लड़ा- BJP का AAP पर प्रहार pic.twitter.com/RltLvL1zkd

— Yug (@mittal68218) April 22, 2024

Methane gas fires have also been a common occurrence at the site, with a massive fire in March 2022 taking firefighters nearly 50 hours to extinguish. 

#WATCH | Fire continues at Ghazipur landfill site in Delhi.

The fire was caused due to gas that is produced in the landfill: Delhi Fire Service SO Naresh Kumar

(Visuals shot at 3:45 am) pic.twitter.com/2pR4ElMzmp

— ANI (@ANI) April 21, 2024

Incidents associated with the landfill also included a collapse of one section onto a nearby road in 2017, which claimed two lives.

In April 2022, after yet another major fire broke out at the landfill, Delhi environment department launched an action plan to prevent the repeat of such incidents. In March 2023, the Delhi authorities set a deadline for leveling Ghazipur for December 2024. However, the timeframe was later moved to December 2026.

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