
Noida gives bulk waste generators 15 days to install compost units
Noida: Noida Authority on Friday directed bulk waste generators to install compost processing units at their premises within 15 days or face action under the Solid Waste Management Rules, 2016.
The directive was issued during a workshop organised at Panchsheel Balak Inter College in Sector 91, attended by representatives from hotels, restaurants, schools, hospitals, colleges, and apartment owner associations, entities classified as bulk waste generators for producing over 100 kg of waste per day.
"We've given a 15-day deadline. If composting units are not set up by then, legal action will follow, and we'll also stop collecting waste from the violators," said S.P.
Singh, general manager (Health), Noida Authority. He added that collective compliance could help Noida secure the top spot in the upcoming Swachh Survekshan 2024, scheduled later this year.
Currently, the city ranks 14th in the annual national cleanliness survey conducted by the Union Ministry of Housing and Urban Affairs.
At the workshop, officials emphasized the importance of in-house composting of wet waste and the need for strict segregation between dry and wet waste at the source.
"Wet waste can be easily converted into compost within residential complexes, hotels, or school campuses. This reduces the burden on the city's central waste handling system," Singh said.
The civic body has also issued a helpline number, 18008919657, for residents and institutions to report issues related to construction and demolition (C&D) waste. The Authority processes around 300 tonnes of C&D waste daily at its Sector 80 facility.
Officials said better waste management at the source, particularly by large generators, would significantly improve Noida's score in cleanliness parameters, including waste segregation, treatment, and civic participation.
The 15-day compliance window is part of a broader strategy to decentralise waste management, reduce landfill burden, and boost community accountability. With Swachh Survekshan rankings often influencing funding and urban development incentives, civic authorities are doubling down on enforcement measures in the lead-up to the survey.
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Indian Express
6 hours ago
- Indian Express
‘There was a wall of fire… seen nothing like this before': How Ahmedabad's firefighters dealt with plane crash aftermath
On the afternoon of June 12, an officer working with the Ahmedabad Fire and Emergency Services (AFES) received an emergency call. With the number of fire cases rising in the scorching summer, responding to such emergencies is par for the course for the city's fire officers. But what this officer heard next was something nothing could have prepared any of them for: A plane crash. 'All odds were against us: From the traffic to the public, to the wind direction and the intensity of the fire. Nothing had prepared us for this. But there was a job to be done, so we got down to it,' said another AFES officer, one of the several team leaders who answered the call in response to the crash of Air India flight AI 171 that resulted in the deaths of 241 out of 242 passengers and at least 19 ground casualties. The first call 'At 1.43 pm, the fire control room received a call from the airport hotline about a plane crash. We dispatched first responder teams from Shahpur, Nikol and Naroda fire stations and then informed the entire force through wireless, asking them to send everyone possible to the crash site,' said a fireman close to the nerve centre of the operations. But the very first job, however, was to actually locate the plane. Sources told The Indian Express, 'We received hundreds of phone calls from the public that day. The people, calling in panic, gave disparate information. While some said the fire was at the Ahmedabad Civil Hospital, others said it was in Meghaninagar. There was a lot of confusion but our teams found its way using the smoke, which followed the crash, as a beacon.' The first responders then called the control room and relayed the scale of the accident after which a full-scale deployment was ordered. The fog of disaster Around this time, some of the officers were at the Riverfront House, working on the recruitment process of firefighters, when a driver saw a large plume of smoke over the horizon. He ran inside the building and informed the officers. A mid-level officer, who was almost 8.5 km away from the crash site when the emergency call came, said, 'In the initial call, we were told that there had been a crash-landing of an aircraft and so, we coordinated to reach the airport circle. However, we saw that the smoke was not coming from the airport. We checked with the control room again and were told to head to Meghaninagar. We reached in 22 minutes despite dealing with severe traffic jams.' Apart from the traffic congestion, what made the task difficult for the firefighters was the crowd of curious onlookers, swelling by the minute. 'It was not just vehicles that were parked on both sides of this road… hundreds of people, too, had gathered to witness the tragedy. We had to disembark from the firefighting vehicles and while some of us rushed towards the site on foot, others had to move people out of the way so that the firefighting vehicles and water bowsers could enter the area,' said another officer. All the officers that The Indian Express spoke to requested anonymity. Wall of fire and smoke 'When we finally reached the crash site, there was nothing but a wall of fire and smoke, and an intense radiating heat … Even the wind was blowing against us and with it, the heat and the smoke,' said an officer. Another officer, among the first to reach the site, said, 'When we reached there, we couldn't see anything… there were just flames. We couldn't even make out the hostel buildings from the fire. We didn't immediately understand the situation but wore our overalls and rushed to the site.' Said an officer, 'On approaching the site, we saw the debris of the aircraft… My first thought was to rescue people who may still be alive inside the building. So, our team rushed in there. Just at the entrance, a piece of debris was on fire with a couple of LPG cylinders lying close to it. We first removed them to a safe place.' Describing the scene inside one of the buildings, the officer said, 'We saw personnel from the Army's Medical Corp also trying to look for survivors. The army men had reached before the firefighters as the military hospital is right behind the hostel. The aircraft's tail had actually collided with a chimney on its premises before hitting the mess building.' By the time the AFES reached the hostel campus, the Airport Firefighting Unit was already at work. The city's firefighters promptly took over. Said another officer, 'We first evacuated around 30 people from the first two hostel buildings next to which the majority of the aircraft had crashed. Initially, we didn't even notice the mess building… We were concerned with the four burning hostel buildings since the mess was not on fire. We began firefighting in the hostel residences.' Notably, the mess building is located at a short distance from the cluster of four residential hostel buildings – Atulyam. On the top floor of a hostel building, a team saw two bodies lying next to each other in the passageway. It looked like the two individuals had tripped while attempting to escape the building. 'The bodies were completely charred,' said a member of this team, adding, 'We sought help from the military personnel to bring the bodies down but, at that point, the building was still on fire and they were not dressed for the situation like we were. Meanwhile, a few firefighters arrived with bedsheets in which they wrapped the two bodies along with another one we found inside the building, and brought them down.' Describing the devastation wrought on the building, an officer said the right side of the aircraft had sheared through the corner pillars and beams 'like a knife' and aviation fuel had led to the entire premises 'burning furiously'. The next task was to deal with the mess building, where the tail of the aircraft was lodged. An officer said, 'It was only when we reached the roof of one of the hostel buildings that we noticed something on the top of the mess. We immediately dispatched a team there.' Finding the fuselage After clearing the first two buildings, a team approached the debris of the aircraft lying between them and spotted the left engine of the Dreamliner. The fuselage, said the officer, was unrecognisable. 'There, we found the bodies of three children huddled together.' Firefighting at the site continued for another 2-3 hours. So, when personnel began pulling the bodies out of the seats, most of the AFES officers were still involved in dousing the massive blaze and multiple blasts caused by the crash. 'We saw charred bodies, hands, legs, intestines everywhere. Some bodies were heaped on each other. Others were fused into each other to the extent we couldn't tell if it was one body or two… many bodies had missing parts lying far away,' said an officer. Another officer said, 'Most of the metal was so hot that we could hardly touch anything even after two hours… By 8.15 pm, the firefighters were drained, both emotionally and physically, to the extent that we could hardly bear to even speak to each other.' The Indian Express attempted to reach out to Chief Fire Officer Amit Dongre regarding the work done by the AFES but he remained unavailable for comment. In a government statement on June 16, Dongre was quoted as saying, 'The fire station teams of Naroda and Shahpur, which reached the scene first, gave a picture of the severity of the situation. In addition to Ahmedabad city, help was also sought from firefighters from Gandhinagar, Kheda, Anand, Vadodara, Gift City and the Army to control the emergency situation. More than 100 firefighting vehicles were deployed at the scene within a short period of time, due to which the rescue operation could be completed in just four hours.' The statement said that 7.50 lakh litres of water had been used to control and cool the fire. Modern resources like Gajraj (a kind of bowser) made the fire-fighting work easier, it added. One of the officers quoted above said around 650 trained personnel were involved in the firefighting operation. No firefighter suffered any injury or damage, he added. Story of two crashes Rajesh Bhatt, retired interim CFO of the AFES, who was a Station Officer at the time of the 1988 crash, told The Indian Express, 'At that time, the aircraft had crashed just short of the runway into the Kotarpur water works located to its north-east … There was nobody on the ground … At that time also, we initially did not realise where the plane had crashed.' He further said, 'In 1988, there was less fuel in the aircraft because it was landing, and not taking off like AI 171. So, the fire was also not as major as this one. Despite that, in my 40-year-long career, I have never been as scared as I was on that day. The scale of the disaster, the condition of the bodies, to pick them up and transport them, was the hardest thing we ever had to do in the line of duty. What our firefighters have done today is extremely commendable.'


Time of India
9 hours ago
- Time of India
‘He prayed to keep family united, they died together'
Mumbai: Imtiaz Ali Syed finds it surreal that his brother's last plea at umrah —to keep his family "together, always"—was granted with such sorrowful finality. In the aftermath of the AI 171 crash in Ahmedabad, the Syed family's tight-knit quartet—Javed, wife Mariam and their two children, Zayn and Amani, all British nationals—were reunited at Jamaat-Ul-Muslimeen kabrastan on Wednesday. "Mariam was like a little sister to me. She even named my firstborn," Imtiaz recalled. "Our father died young. Our mother and grandmother raised us together. We've always been close: two sons, two daughters, all inseparable." The Syed family hadn't gathered in 15 years—until Javed's layover in Mumbai. Imtiaz disagreed with AI's initial handling of the crisis. "It should've deployed emergency staff in Ahmedabad immediately. I was mourning and managing it all, while waiting two days for any outreach." He said once engaged, the airline "was extremely efficient". Even amid searing loss, Imtiaz channels his brother's legacy of generosity. "Javed sponsored underprivileged students. We'll continue that work for his peace. If people remember anything from his life, let it be his belief in sadaqah—being kind and generous, always." —Mrinalini Singh


Time of India
10 hours ago
- Time of India
God's wish: Man who lost 2 loved ones in air crashes 37 years apart
Ahmedabad: For businessman Saurin Palkhiwala, the news of Air India Flight 171's crash brought back the most painful memories of his life. In the 1988 air tragedy in Ahmedabad, he had lost his sister's prospective father-in-law. On June 12, his 26-year-old daughter Sanjana was among the 241 passengers who perished in one of the worst aviation disasters the country has seen. "When I got the news of the AI 171 plane crash, shock numbed me as I had witnessed a crash site before. Instinctively, I knew I had lost my daughter and prayed for her. I rushed home from the office, picked my wife Sonali and left for Civil Hospital," says Palkhiwala, his voice breaking. In 1988, a young Palkhiwala had dashed to the crash site to find that his sister's to-be father-in-law, merchant banker Pradeep Harkishandas Dalal, had succumbed to his injuries. Now, he is reeling from the grief of losing his only daughter, Sanjana, who was flying to the UK for a reunion with her friends from college. The Palkhiwalas say the almighty blessed them with a child late and took her back early. "Sanjana was born to us 14 years after marriage. My wife is an ardent devotee of Goddess Gayatri and when Sanjana was born, we were grateful for the divine gift. She was a brilliant student. Our home is full of her memories and wonderful paintings. After completing her BBA from Pune, she pursued her master's in management of technology (MOT) from New York University. She was going to the UK for a reunion with her college friends," Palkhiwala said. The family has adorned the house with numerous pictures of Sanjana through various phases of her short life, and is going through a difficult time of processing her untimely death. "The only way to come to terms with this loss is to know that it is almighty's wish. We cannot do anything in such a situation. Just the other day we were planning her engagement and then performed her last rites and held a besna," the anguished father said. Sanjana was a connoisseur of global cuisine and was keen on starting a business in the food sector. Saloni Palkhiwala, Sanjana's cousin, said, "We bonded very well and were like twin sisters. She had just started playing tennis and enjoyed cricket. She was a lively person who loved dancing, reading, painting and travelling."