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Mumbai Collects 952 Tonnes Of Garbage From Its Seven Beaches In The Wake Massive Downpour

The Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation (BMC) recovered 952 metric tonnes of wet waste from its seven beaches following massive garbage deposited by the sea waters. The scale of the pile-up on its beaches including Girgaum, Dadar, Mahim, Juhu, Versova, Madh-Marve and Gorai, was so large that the BMC was forced to undertake a massive 24×7 clean-up. Over 380 personnel from six different agencies were involved in this week-long exercise to clear the beaches off the garbage thrown back by the sea following a heavy downpour. Maximum garbage weighing 375 metric tonnes were recovered from Juhu beach followed by 300 tonnes from the Dadar-Mahim beachfront. The cleanest stretch of Mumbai’s 34 km coastline seems to be Gorai with barely 20 tonnes of garbage recovered. Mumbai is now installing trash booms on six major storm water drains to prevent floating waste from flowing into the Arabian Sea. Collectively costing over Rs 22 crore over the next three years, these thrash booms will also help to keep the city’s beaches clean. The city currently spends an estimated Rs 3 lakhs daily to keep its beaches clean. Environmental activists like Zoru Bhathena wonder why the BMC does not put up the cheaper trash boom nets across all its nalla outlets. “Why can’t our city simply stop the garbage from flowing into the sea rather than waste revenue and resources cleaning up its beaches?” he asks.