
From Cartons to Community Parks: Mumbai Launches Citywide Recycling Relay on World Environment Day
Mumbai (Maharashtra) [India], June 5: To mark World Environment Day, Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation (BMC), Rotary Club of Bombay Mid City, and Tetra Pak India have joined forces to launch a citywide sustainability campaign--the Carton Recycling Relay--designed to turn used beverage cartons into durable benches for Mumbai's public parks.
In its first phase, the initiative aims to collect 2.5 lakh used cartons from across the city, which will be recycled into 25 garden benches to be installed in selected public parks. This collaborative effort brings to life the principles of recycling, circular economy, and community participation, with citizens at the heart of the transformation.
"This is a brilliant example of how partnerships can bring sustainability into public spaces, and how the public can actively participate in this transformation," said Jeetendra V. Pardeshi, Superintendent of the Gardens and Tree Office, BMC. "We're not just recycling--we're creating something useful and lasting for the community. This initiative represents the kind of smart, sustainable thinking our city needs."
To kick off the campaign, a set of benches made entirely from recycled cartons were donated to Patwardhan Park, Bandra, a popular green space in Mumbai. The event was attended by Mr. Dinesh Pallewad, Assistant Commissioner, Ms. Swapna Mhatre, Ex Corporator, Mr. Dnyandev Mundhe, Dy. Supdt. of Gardens Zone 3, Mr. Kamlesh Kholiya, Sustainability Manager, Tetra Pak South Asia; Ajay Mishra, Rotary President; and Ms Monisha Narke, Founder, RUR Greenlife.
"At Tetra Pak, we believe that sustainability is a shared responsibility," added Kamlesh Kholiya, Sustainability Manager, Tetra Pak South Asia. "The Carton Recycling Relay turns citizens into changemakers. By transforming used cartons into public assets, we're fostering circularity and strengthening community engagement."
A life-size, carton-shaped collection bin will now travel across prominent locations in the city, encouraging schools, housing societies, businesses, and individuals to deposit their used beverage cartons. More than 50 drop-off points are already available across Reliance Retail and Shakari Bhandar stores across Mumbai up to make participation easy and accessible for all.
Over the next few weeks, the relay will travel across key Mumbai locations, mobilizing schools, RWAs, and workplaces. As the city works toward the 2.5 lakh carton target, 22 more benches will be created and donated--transforming waste into symbols of community action and environmental stewardship.
"Sustainability is one of the 7 pillars of Rotary thrust area and always work around related to protection of environment. We are working with MCGM and corporate to set up street furniture made from recycled waste for awareness since long time. We are happy to see that Tetra Pak came forward to support the cause and create awareness. We are glad to work as bridges between benefactor and donor," added Ajay Mishra, President, Rotary.
The initiative is being implemented on-ground by RUR Greenlife, a long-standing Tetra Pak partner known for its work in waste management and citizen-led recycling. Media outreach is being supported by Free Press Journal.
This campaign is part of a program called 'Go Green with Tetra Pak' launched in 2010 by Tetra Pak, in collaboration with Reliance Retail and RUR Greenlife. The program encourages Mumbaikars to drop off their used beverage cartons at over 60 Reliance Smart and Sahakari Bhandar outlets, and over 100 other drop-off points across Mumbai. These cartons are then recycled into useful items like desks & garden benches and donated back to the society. Tetra Pak cartons are paper-based, recyclable, and increasingly being recycled through a robust ecosystem nurtured by Tetra Pak over the last 20 years, working closely with various stakeholders such as urban local governments, NGOs, brand owners, academia, and consumers.
A complete list of carton deposit points is available here.
Tetra Pak is a global leader in food processing and packaging solutions, ensuring safe and nutritious food reaches millions in over 160 countries. With a strong commitment to sustainability, the company continually innovates to protect food, people, and the planet through impactful community programs and advanced recycling initiatives.
With over 24,000 employees worldwide, Tetra Pak remains dedicated to making food safe and available, everywhere, while upholding its promise to protect what's good: food, people, and the planet.
More information about Tetra Pak is available at www.tetrapak.com.
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Indian Express
an hour ago
- Indian Express
Powai SOS: Call from a dying lake
'Citizens should place flowers, garlands and other objects in the sacred urn placed nearby. Plastic should be discarded in dustbins', appeal the BMC boards affixed all along the Powai lake. Yet, a peep into its surface shows the water strewn with garbage, plastic bags, bottles, glass items, clothes etc. 'Koi sunta hi nahi hai (Nobody listens to us),' says Ulhas Pawar, a civic sanitation worker, who has been working at the lake's Ganpati Visarjan Ghat for the past few years. 'We ask them to use the pots kept for this purpose but they simply ignore us. Everyday, we remove the solid waste, wearing gloves and using devices but it is back to square one by the next day.' A further walk along the lake exposes colonies of hyacinths, so dense that it camouflages with the grass sprouting on the ground that surrounds it. In March this year, Powai Lake's deteriorating condition came to fore as the entire waterline of the lake was laden with dense vegetation including hyacinths. While local residents alleged this was the worst case of vegetative invasion they had observed in the water body over the last few decades, it set off alarm bells over the water body's depleting health across the city. But there's more to the lake than meets the eye. A report commissioned by the Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation (BMC) has found that over 18 million litres of sewage water is discharged into the Powai lake every day. This, for perspective, is equivalent to the total amount of potable water which Tulsi lake supplies to Mumbai city daily. Sprawled over 210 hectares in the eastern suburbs, the lake is not only thronged by locals and tourists but also serves as abode to Indian marsh crocodiles, a species protected under Schedule I of Wildlife Protection Act, 1972. It is located in the southeast of Vihar lake, with the surplus from its catchment area overflowing and channeling to the Mithi river through natural estuaries. Jolted to action by public outcry, the BMC, this year, rolled out a Rs 108 crore plan to revive the lake. Last month, the National Green Tribunal (NGT) also served notices to BMC, Maharashtra Pollution Control Board (MPCB), Maharashtra State Wetland Authority (MSWA) and the state government, directing them to submit a response by September detailing remedial measures and causes for neglect of the water body. A joint committee has also been constituted to submit a report outlining revival plans. However, this is not the administration's first attempt at restoration. A rocky history The youngest of the city's three lakes, Powai lake has always been fraught with difficulties. It was in 1889, over concerns of an anticipated drought, that the erstwhile Bombay Municipal Corporation had sanctioned the construction of Powai lake. Planned to augment Mumbai's water supply, Powai was artificially created as an auxiliary to Vihar lake, which albeit planned in 1860, was failing to meet the city's water demands. The lake was created at the site of erstwhile Kopri village, under the Powai estate, which was home to 23 huts at the time. The establishment of the project left the residents of Kopri displaced, with the lake constructed within a period of one year by 1890. However, within five months, the corporation stopped drawing water from the lake amid several reports pointing to high pollution levels in the lake. For many, Powai Lake's ill fated abandon was a symptom of the larger lack of planning of water schemes in erstwhile Bombay. Dr. Madhu Kelkar, who has extensively worked on the history of the water management system in colonial Bombay, said that the Powai lake was sanctioned in 1889 as a knee-jerk reaction to concerns over a water famine. 'Contrary to popular belief, the Powai lake scheme was completed by 1890 and it is very surprising that the project was completed within one year. Even though the lake is in a low lying area, the civic engineers had approved the location in its survey. So, even though over Rs. 6 lakh had been spent for the scheme, water from the lake was drawn for only five months after which the idea was ditched. Two years later by 1892, the lake was completely abandoned,' said Kelkar. The revival plans As suburbs expanded and Powai grew, several plans were conceived to revive the lake. In 1918, Kelkar says, the Bombay government had planned three schemes which included Aarey, Powai and Kanheri to cater to the suburbs' rising water demand. 'Even though Aarey and Kanheri schemes were abandoned, a plan to revive Powai was finalised. This was also owing to growing anger amongst the suburban population, who despite having two lakes — Vihar and Tulsi — were facing water crisis,' she said. According to records from the Maharashtra State Gazetteers, nearly Rs 5 lakh was spent yet again in 1919 in what was deemed 'a vain attempt to restore the supply at least for the use of the suburbs'. 'However, once again, the scheme revival was abandoned after the Bombay Development Department (BDD) was created in 1920. While the BDD considered the scheme, it was abandoned as it was assumed that the Salsette island at some time in the near future would become part of Bombay municipal limits. Hence, it decided to depend on extended Tansa lake to fulfil the island's needs.' 'After BDD was disbanded, the plan to revive Powai lake for water supply in the suburbs was once again planned in the 1930s but this time too, it yielded no positive results,' Kelkar added. In the midst of its abandonment, the Powai lake was briefly given to a syndicate manufacturing Agave fibre in 1892 while in 1945, municipal records show that the lake was given to a trust for an annual rent of Rs 800 to draw water for a ten-year period. Kelkar maintained, 'However, we do not know whether the trust actually used the water from the lake.' Over 130 years on, Powai's waters continue to remain non-potable with the civic body now deploying it for industrial purposes. Pollution woes and its sources Despite being historically infamous for its murky, polluted waters, Powai Lake has always boasted of a rich and thriving ecosystem. In a city gasping for space, the lake serves as a massive open landscape, surrounded by green hills. B N Kumar, director of the environment watchdog group, NatConnect Foundation, recalls that until at least 1979, the lake was thronged by mango orchards, making it a popular picnic spot for many, but with the spurt of residential clusters around the lake in the 1980s and the uncontrolled growth that followed, came the enormous burden on the lake. It was during this period that the IIT Bombay's 1980 batch launched a 'revitalization' plan for the lake using sustainable techniques. In 1995, the Powai lake was also selected as one of the ten lakes earmarked for improvements under the MOEEF's National Lake Conservation Plan (NLCP). In fact, in 2002, the NLCP released a fund of Rs. 6.62 crore for a restoration programme which was carried out by the BMC. Records show that the entire project was executed by March 2005. However, despite the improvement projects, resident say that they first started noticing colonies of hyacinth thriving across the lake, over two decades ago. 'I have been coming to Powai lake for nearly 12 years. Earlier, the lake would host such rich biodiversity and I would spot diverse birds ranging from Grey herons, purple herons, spot billed ducks during my morning walks. But now, the migratory birds have all but stopped as the water has become so polluted. After rampant construction, I also noticed that hyacinths started growing on the water,' said Anamika Sharma, a Powai resident who grew up in the area. In 2016 too, the BMC unveiled plans for revival of the lake through short-term and long-term measures like desilting which was slated to complete in 2019, but the lake health continued to deteriorate. Pointing to 'accelerated growth of residential, commercial and industrial areas around the lake', the Urban Wetland/Water Bodies Management Guidelines, 2021 outlined by the National Mission for Clean Ganga and the School of Planning and Architecture in Delhi states that nearly 40 percent of the Powai lake has vanished. Today, the lake is flanked by the busy JVLR road to its south, IIT Bombay campus to its north, commercial establishments like hotels, slum pockets as well as the residential complexes. According to Abhijit Bangar, Additional Municipal Commissioner (Projects), nearly 18 MLD of sewage water is discharged into the lake from as many as 18 outfalls surrounding the lake. 'Most of these outfalls are situated along the southern end of the lake. Some wastewater also discharges into the lake from unauthorised bastis,' said Bangar. The 18 outfalls were identified in a report submitted by an external consultant, Tandon Urban Solutions Pvt Ltd., who was appointed by the BMC in 2023 at a cost of Rs 67 lakh to prepare the detailed project report for improving the water quality. The report was commissioned after the NGT in 2022 had called for the constitution of an eight-member committee to draft a pollution remedial action plan for the lake. Speaking to The Indian Express, an official from BMC explained, 'There are nearly 18 storm water drains and culverts discharging into the lake. While these drains are meant for rain water, the rampant construction and illegal slums around the area has meant that a lot of waste water is also deposited into the lake through the drains.' The report findings, accessed by The Indian Express, show that the worst quality of sewage water has been observed at the Peru Baug outfall wherein the BOD levels — which indicates the concentration of oxygen required for survival of aquatic life — were recorded at a whopping 72 mg/L for three days. This is significantly higher than the accepted standards of less than 10 mg/L, which is the prescribed standard for the treated effluents permitted to dispose into the sea. Overall, the BOD levels across the 18 outfalls ranged between 28 mg/L and 72 mg/L. Many experts, including BMC officials, concur that significant discharge of waste water is one of the major contributing factors for the proliferation of vegetation like hyacinths. What makes hyacinths dangerous is that it prevents sunlight from penetrating through the water, affecting the aquatic life and water quality. Dr Rakesh Kumar, president for the Society of Indoor Environment (SIE), said that aquatic life is impacted owing to several factors ranging from heavy discharge of silt during rains as well as vegetation growth. 'When there is a lot of weed, algae, hyacinth, sunlight is prevented from seeping into the water, affecting the movement of water. Contrary to popular belief that lake water is still, churn of water is extremely important. When the sunlight penetrates naturally, the water column mixes on its own. But when the light seepage stops due to vegetation on the surface, the water becomes stagnant and makes it unhealthy,' added Kumar. It was, therefore, in March, when the entire Powai lake was covered in a blanket of vegetation, that a group of 25 – 20 locals banded together to form the 'Save Powai Lake and Environment group'. 'This was perhaps the first time that we had seen the entire Powai lake covered in hyacinth. For the past 24 years, I have seen so many citizen movements and so much money squandered into the lake and nothing has come out of it. Powai Lake is a part of us, so when we saw its condition our ALM decided to raise the issue,' said Pamela Cheema, a member of the Save Powai Lake and Environment group. As visuals of the thick hyacinth growth took the social media by storm and the group amped up pressure over the lake's deteriorating state, senior civic officials as well as politicians made a beeline to the site to assure of remedial measures. In May, the BMC fast tracked its plans for the improvement of lake water quality, with the objective of treatment of sewage at its core. How does BMC plan to clean the lake Having identified the total quantum of 18 MLD sewage water and its sources through its commissioned study, the BMC has charted an ambitious plan that seeks to intercept the divert and treat the large volumes of waste water discharging into the water body. Valued at a combined cost of Rs 108.25 crore, the civic body floated two tenders in April, this year to detect, curb and divert sewage and sludge from flowing into a lake through a network of new sewer lines and a sewage treatment plant. The first proposal — which is set to cost Rs. 39.37 crore — seeks to establish a 3056 metres-long (3.56 km) sewer line as well as 13 interceptors across the lake's 18 outfalls, to ultimately divert the ingress to treatment plants. According to the master plan, the longest network of 1.9 km will be established to control 8 MLD of sewage flowing in from nearly 14 outfalls, which will be diverted to the new STP proposed in Powai. Apart from this, the proposal also seeks to intercept 8 MLD water flowing in from three outfalls near the IIT Bombay main gate, which will be diverted through the existing sewer line along the JVLR route and a new 942 meter-long network using gravity system. Flowing into the lake from the Peru baug area, the remaining 2 MLD of the 18 MLD wastewater will be controlled and diverted to the Peru Baug pumping station through a 205 meter-long sewer line, which is slated to be built using the open cut method. Through the Peru Baug station, the wastewater will be routed to the existing 9 MLD treatment plant at Mithi River. Pegged at the cost of Rs. 68.88 crore, meanwhile, the second proposal seeks to establish an 8 MLD sewage treatment plant in Powai. This new sewage treatment plant is proposed to come up in place of an abandoned sewage pumping station, which currently stands For this project — which entails demolition of the existing structures, construction as well as operation and maintenance for a period of six years — the BMC is eyeing to rope in a second contractor with expertise in the domain. 'Collectively, the two projects will intercept 18 MLD sewage water and then divert it for treatment. While the contract on the first proposal which seeks to lay over a 3km sewer line was awarded in June, we are currently in the process of evaluating the bids for the construction of the new STP in Powai. The process is likely to be completed over the next one month, following which work on the second project will also commence,' a senior BMC official told Express. The plans — of laying sewer lines, interceptors as well as constructing a new STP — are projected to be completed over the course of the next two years. In the meantime, officials maintain while the proposals will take off soon, that it continually cleans out the lake by removing the floating vegetation through machines ranging from poclains, harvester machines and dumpers. However, when The Indian Express visited the Powai lake, earlier in August, the machines were amiss from action with all vegetation growth pushed to the fringes of the lake. Amid filth and solid waste strewn along the periphery of the lake, a thick blanket of hyacinth covered the south eastern edges of the lake. 'Every day through our balcony, I see the hyacinth vegetation float from one part of the lake to the other. While the BMC claims that the lake has been cleared of vegetation, the fact is that the hyacinth has just been pushed to the edges because of the monsoon winds. The vegetation is so thick that it appears like an extension of the land, giving the illusion of the lake being cleared,' said Milan Bhat, a Powai resident. While locals have welcomed the civic body's plans, they have called for the immediate implementation of the project. 'So many projects have been announced in the past and yet, nothing took off the ground. This time, there is a hope as there seems to be some semblance with time bound plans. Having already lost so many decades, it is essential that the civic body implements the project at the earliest and improve the water quality,' added B N Kumar, who is director of the environment watchdog group, NatConnect Foundation. He added that the civic body should also carry out desilting of the lakes, which are long impending, to improve carrying capacity while the muck can also be used as a manure. Meanwhile, experts such as Dr. Rakesh Kumar said that what the lake demands is comprehensive conservation effort. 'When we speak about Powai lake, it is not just about the sewage but about controlling pollution on other fronts like littering by tourists, improving overall water quality.' Dr. Rakesh Kumar added, 'While cleaning of hyacinths is important, that's not enough. These hyacinths are fed by the nutrients in the sediments. Thus, we need a plan to target the sediments as well as address the high nitrogen and phosphorus levels in the lake.'


Hindustan Times
3 hours ago
- Hindustan Times
Colaba BMC school shutdown: Lack of devices, poor internet push hundreds of students out of class
MUMBAI: Nearly a month after the Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation (BMC) declared two buildings of the Mumbai Public School in Colaba unsafe and moved 1,500 English-medium students to online classes, the experiment is collapsing. Families say the lack of devices, poor internet connectivity and absence of a structured routine have left hundreds of children without access to education — with many simply dropping out. Mumbai, India – 10, Aug 2025: Mumbai Public School at Colaba, in Mumbai, India, on Sunday, Aug 10, 2025. (Photo by Bhushan Koyande/HT Photo) The school at A M Sawant Marg was shut on July 15 after the BMC's School Infrastructure Cell (SIC) categorised one building as C1 (dilapidated) and ordered the demolition of both structures. While students from Marathi, Hindi, Kannada and Urdu sections were shifted to other municipal schools, there was no physical relocation for the two English-medium sections from kindergarten to Class 8. For children in Ambedkar Nagar and Ganesh Murti Nagar, where most of the students live, virtual classes have proved unworkable. Many households have just one smartphone — if any — which must be shared among siblings and working parents. Mobile data is costly and unreliable, and the narrow lanes and crowded rooms offer no quiet place to study. Sameer Shaikh, a tourist guide at the Gateway of India, has four children who have not attended a single complete class since the closure. 'We have one phone, which I need for work. They take turns, but it's impossible to keep up. No one told us the school was shutting until it happened,' he says, still paying monthly instalments on the phone he bought on EMI. Parents say the closure has disrupted children's lives far beyond academics. 'Two of my daughters haven't been to school for over a month,' says Neru Rathod, father of three. 'Even when my eighth-grade daughter uses my phone, I don't know if she's attending class or just playing games. In our community, children are often seen outside playing during school hours now.' Some parents recall being assured of a quick solution. 'They told us it would reopen within ten days,' says Charan Rathod, whose sixth-grade daughter Kritika now spends her mornings chasing a stable network signal. 'We've had no updates since. Authorities promised to shift students to another school, but nothing has happened.' Antu Rathod, whose son Krishna was in Class 8, says the uncertainty is demoralising. 'He went to school on June 12, then in July they said stop coming. We live ten minutes away, yet now he has nowhere to go for classes.' The 60-year-old school, established in 1964, has educated generations in Colaba's fishing villages, slums and chawls. Known for committed teachers and good results, it was a preferred choice for working-class families. Community representatives have questioned why both buildings were shut simultaneously, pointing out that one was categorised as C2 — needing major repairs but not demolition. 'They could have demolished one and kept the other open,' says a local activist. Former corporator Makarand Narwekar has been working to find an interim solution. He took parents to inspect Mukesh Mills, where a temporary cabin system was suggested, and negotiated with MTNL for its building. Rent demands — initially ₹22 lakh, later reduced to ₹16 lakh — stalled the talks. 'Every week lost makes it harder to bring these kids back to learning,' he warns. Narwekar says other spaces, such as the World Trade Centre, could be considered. On August 6, Narwekar wrote to civic commissioner and administrator Bhushan Gagrani, and to the Maharashtra State Commission for Protection of Child Rights, urging immediate action. His letter calls for the identification of temporary learning spaces and an urgent meeting with local representatives, school authorities and parents. 'This is how dropouts happen,' he says. 'This is how kids go astray.' BMC education officer Sujata Khare says some children have been shifted to other schools but accommodating all 1,500 remains a challenge. 'We are exploring nearby spaces to relocate the students,' she said. Deputy municipal commissioner (Education) Prachi Jambhekar has previously stated that no suitable welfare or amenity spaces are available in the vicinity, and the Colaba Market location used for some students was only freed after the election office vacated it.


Hans India
15 hours ago
- Hans India
Protecting nature is responsibility of every citizen, says Haryana CM
Haryana Chief Minister Nayab Singh Saini said on Sunday that protecting nature and environment is not merely a government initiative but the responsibility of every citizen. "Amid continuous development, we must not forget that the basis of life lies in nature and trees. Issues like climate change, irregular rainfall and rising temperatures can only be addressed through large-scale tree plantation and their protection, which is essential for securing our future," he added. The Chief Minister said that the state government has set a target of planting 2.1 crore saplings under several campaigns, to be achieved with collective efforts. He was addressing the 76th state-level Van Mahotsav organised at Seonsar in Kurukshetra district. Earlier, he laid the foundation stone of the Saraswati Wetland Reservoir, Saraswati Flora and Biodiversity Conservation Park and Saraswati Jungle Safari. He also released the 'Triphala' booklet. On this occasion, the Chief Minister planted saplings to give a message of environmental protection. He also unveiled the Haryana wildlife map, Kurukshetra wildlife map, and five books prepared by the Forest Department. Chief Minister Saini said that the 76th Van Mahotsav is not just an event, but a symbol of gratitude towards nature, responsibility and a resolve to ensure a happy future for generations to come. "This is the third event in the series of this year's state-level Van Mahotsav celebrations. Various programmes are also being held at the district level across the state, with active participation from local people and students." He added that Van Mahotsav means a festival of forests, a tribute to nature, and an expansion of greenery. "It reminds us that trees are not just a source of wood but the foundation of life." He said that "while we are moving ahead rapidly in the race for modernity, Van Mahotsav reminds us not to exploit nature but to learn to coexist with it". Recognising the importance of trees, the state government has launched several plantation drives, which have yielded positive results, the Chief Minister added. Many plans have been formulated to increase forest cover, CM Saini said. He added that Prime Minister Narendra Modi also launched a unique campaign, "Ek Ped Maa Ke Naam", on June 5, 2024, on World Environment Day at the Buddha Jayanti Park in Delhi. In the first phase of this campaign, a target of planting 1.6 crore saplings in Haryana was set, but the state exceeded the target by planting 1.87 crore saplings. This year, on June 5, the second phase of "Ek Ped Maa Ke Naam" began, with a target of 2.1 crore saplings. "Since October 2014, about 18 crore saplings have been planted in the state." The state government has also started special schemes to promote urban forestry so that greenery can be increased in cities. In addition, strict measures have been taken to prevent illegal felling of trees and to protect wildlife. The Forest Department has been instructed to be more proactive in this direction. To make society more sensitive towards forests and wildlife, facilities such as jeep safaris and children's study tours have been arranged at Kalesar. The 'Green Aravalli Action Plan' has also been launched in southern Haryana. This joint project of the Central and state governments will be implemented in the Aravalli hills of four states, including Haryana, covering 29 districts, five of which are in Haryana.