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Environmental emergency in Bellandur lake, not even 1 ml of clean water available, NGT informed

New Delhi: Indiscriminate discharge of untreated sewage into Bengaluru's Bellandur lake has resulted in an "environmental emergency", a committee has told the National Green Tribunal, adding that there is not even one millilitre of clean water in the lake.

The NGT-mandated committee said the biggest lake of the beautiful city of Bengaluru had become the largest septic tank of the city due to "sheer callousness and indifference" of the authorities.

"According to the material collected, the water holding capacity of Bellandur lake has rapidly shrunk due to indiscriminate dumping of construction and demolition waste, municipal solid waste and due to vast spread of hydrophyte and microphytes in the lake water.

Hydrophytes are aquatic plants that grow in or near water and provides cover for fish and other aquatic organisms.

"The commission during the inspection was shocked to notice a road that has been constructed on the Varthur lake by dumping construction and demolition waste under the garb of laying a pipeline," the report, filed by the three-member committee, said.

The report, filed by the committee comprising senior advocate Raj Panjwani and advocates Sumeer Sodhi and Rahul Chaudhary, also states that Bellandur lake has caught fire 12 times since the first incident on August 12, 2016.

"During the inspection of Bellandur lake, it came to the commission's notice that the storm water drain outlets near the lake were discharging nothing but sewage and effluent and the same was being released into the so-called lake.

"After an almost circumferential tour of the lake, the commission further observed that there is not even one millilitre of clean water in the lake, but the same was filled up with sewage, effluent, solid waste, weed, debris, etc.," the report said.

An estimated 480 million litres per day (MLD) of sewage from Bellandur lake flows into Varthur lake and in addition, approximately 60-70 MLD of additional sewage flow from the local storm water drains.

"The commission during its visit observed that the condition of Varthur lake is no better, in fact worse than Bellandur lake in almost every aspect from fire to froth and from sewage to stink. Varthur is an aggravated calamity by the sheer volume of filth that is dumped in it without any ecological sensitivity," it said.

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