Ghazipur landfill

The Ghazipur landfill is a landfill established in 1984. It is located in Ghazipur, a village in the eastern district of Delhi, India.[1]
The landfill covers an area of approximately 70 acres (28 ha)[2], and according to the last count in 2019, is 65 metres (213 feet) in height[3]. Ghazipur has become one of the largest landfills in Delhi. The landfill reached its maximum capacity in 2002; however, it continues to receive solid waste from the city of Delhi.[4]
Despite efforts to mitigate problems, long-term mismanagement at the landfill has created significant ongoing environmental, fire, and human health hazards, with the site emitting toxic gases, polluting groundwater, and creating an extreme fire hazard.[5][6]
A major fire broke out at the landfill site on 21 April 2024; the fire rapidly spread, engulfing several areas of the landfill.[7] Toxic smoke from the fire has caused significant health and breathing problems.[8] The cause of the fire is undetermined.[9][10] The National Green Tribunal (NGT) has requested a reply from the relevant authorities, such as the Central Pollution Control Board (CPCB) and the Municipal Corporation of Delhi (MCD), regarding the recent fire incident at the Ghazipur landfill site within a period of five weeks.[11]
In response to the environmental and public health concerns, the Municipal Corporation of Delhi (MCD), under the supervision of the National Green Tribunal (NGT), has increased remediation work at the Ghazipur landfill.[12][13] In July 2025, the MCD submitted a detailed compliance report to the NGT outlining measures to control pollution, manage leachate, and address structural risks, including repairing surface cracks and installing perforated pipes to safely vent methane gas.[13] The report stated that approximately 85 lakh metric tonnes of waste remained at the site as of March 2025 and that full clearance was targeted for 2028.[12][13] Biomining operations at Ghazipur have progressed into its second phase, with authorities reporting that substantial quantities of legacy waste have already been processed and additional waste-processing facilities are being planned to accelerate reclamation and reduce the height of the landfill mound.[14] As part of the longer-term redevelopment plans, the MCD has issued tenders for a new waste-to-energy plant at Ghazipur under a public–private partnership model to reduce reliance on open air dumping and convert a portion of municipal waste into energy.[15] Alongside waste removal, municipal authorities have stated that reclaimed landfill land is intended to be converted into green or forested zones through plantation drives, with similar initiatives at other Delhi dumpsites involving the planting of bamboo and other vegetation to stabilise soil conditions and improve environmental conditions.[12][16]
See also
References
- ^ Frayer, L. (6 July 2019), "A Day's Work On Delhi's Mountain Of Trash", NPR, retrieved 22 April 2024
- ^ "Ghazipur garbage dump almost as tall as Qutub Minar: Story behind Delhi's largest landfill site", India Today, 1 September 2018, retrieved 22 April 2024
- ^ "Explained: How Ghazipur landfill's height was reduced and if it can be permanently cleared", The Indian Express, 26 July 2020, retrieved 26 November 2025
- ^ Khan, M. (1 May 2023), "Waste processing at Ghazipur landfill yet to pick up pace", The Hindu, retrieved 22 April 2024
- ^ Matharu, S. (9 January 2023), "Machines are digging, dragging, tearing into Delhi garbage mountains. Time's running out", The Print India, retrieved 22 April 2024
- ^ Dhillon, A. (29 March 2022), "Toxic fumes fill Delhi's skies after vast landfill site catches fire", The Guardian, retrieved 22 April 2024
- ^ "Major fire erupts at Delhi's Ghazipur landfill site, smoke engulfs area", Hindustan Times, 22 April 2024, retrieved 22 April 2024
- ^ "As Ghazipur residents complain of throat and breathing irritation, we ask experts about health risks associated with landfill fire smoke", The Indian Express, 22 April 2024, retrieved 22 April 2024
- ^ "Striking images of Delhi's Ghazipur landfill fire: Horrid past and present", Times of India, 22 April 2024, retrieved 22 April 2024
- ^ "Ghazipur landfill fire: Govt investigating why it happened, says AAP leader Atishi", India Times, 22 April 2024, retrieved 22 April 2024
- ^ Service, Express News (6 May 2024), "NGT seeks authorities' reply on Ghazipur landfill blaze", The New Indian Express, retrieved 8 May 2024
- ^ a b c "MCD seeks proposals for reuse of reclaimed landfill sites", The Times of India, 20 September 2025, ISSN 0971-8257, retrieved 27 January 2026
- ^ a b c "MCD updates NGT on Ghazipur landfill clean-up; Targets full reclamation by 2028", The Times of India, 11 July 2025, ISSN 0971-8257, retrieved 27 January 2026
- ^ Verma, Anup (5 November 2025), "Ghazipur landfill site to be fully cleared by 2027, MCD to set up 4 processing facilities: Panel chief", The New Indian Express, retrieved 27 January 2026
- ^ Service, Express News (12 July 2025), "Tenders out for waste-to-energy unit in Ghazipur", The New Indian Express, retrieved 27 January 2026
- ^ "54,000 Trees To Come Up On Reclaimed Part Of Landfill", The Times of India, 4 March 2025, ISSN 0971-8257, retrieved 27 January 2026
Further reading
- Kumar, S. (2023), Circular Economy in Municipal Solid Waste Landfilling: Biomining & Leachate Treatment, Radionuclides and Heavy Metals in the Environment, Springer, pp. 55–57, doi:10.1007/978-3-031-07785-2, ISBN 978-3-031-07785-2
External links
- "In pictures: Delhi residents choke on landfill fire fumes", Reuters, 22 April 2024, retrieved 22 April 2024