Ten women and seven men were killed while a man and woman were injured in a massive blaze at a firecracker storage unit in outer Delhi's Bawana industrial area last evening.
Barely a month before the Bawana cracker unit tragedy, the Delhi Pollution Control Committee (DPCC) had pulled up civic bodies for indiscriminately granting licences to industrial units.
In an official order, the DPCC, which comes under the Environment Department, said the "root cause" of the proliferation of illegal industrial units was the fact that people are obtaining licences from the civic bodies, despite not having the "mandatory" consent from the pollution board.
"Industries/units are operating both in approved industrial areas/estates/redevelopment areas and also in residential/non-conforming areas without obtaining prior mandatory consent from DPCC," says the DPCC order, dated December 22, 2017.
Under the Delhi Master Plan 2021, prepared by the Delhi Development Authority (DDA), industrial units can come up, after obtaining the mandatory clearances, only in certain approved zones.
In its order, the DPCC barred all the agencies from granting any licences or water and power connections to industrial units, in residential as well as approved areas, not having the 'Consent to Establish' from the pollution board.
Earlier, during a meeting with Lt Governor Anil Baijal on December 7, Supreme Court-appointed Environment Pollution (Prevention and Control) Authority chairperson Bhure Lal had raised the issue of air pollution caused by industries running in Badli, Bawana, Narela and the DTU areas.
Later, the EPCA had sought to know the total number of such industrial units operating in Delhi, but the DPCC and the municipal agencies failed to respond and had sought to pass the buck on each other.
But this norm has been violated over the years prompting the DPCC to reiterate its position through a formal order.
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