The coal-based Badarpur power plant, considered a major source of air pollution in Delhi, will close by July 2018, the Supreme Court-appointed Environment Pollution-Prevention and Control Authority (EPCA) today said.
The NTPC (National Thermal Power Corporation) has also prepared a remediation plan on managing the flyash, of around 250 lakh tonne, present at the site, which also adds to the level of particulate matters in the city's air.
The plan has been submitted to the Delhi Pollution Control Committee (DPCC), an NTPC official told an EPCA meeting here, which was chaired by its chairman Bhure Lal and attended by the authorities concerned.
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In the meeting, EPCA member Sunita Narain, the chief of Centre for Science and Environment (CSE), expressed concern on the amount of particulate matter and sulphate particles, of plumes from coal-fired plants, in the city's air.
"The IIT-Kanpur study of the city's air quality has observed that Delhi's air has the presence of flyash in it," she said, while also pitching for the Bawana gas-based power plant to operate in its full capacity.
Bhure Lal also emphasised that the Bawana plant has to start operating its full capacity and directed the authorities concerned to resolve the issues hindering its functioning.
The Delhi Power Department told the EPCA the thermal plant, essentially two of its units of 210-MW each, have to function to meet the power needs of south Delhi areas and the peak demand during the summers, which may touch a high of 6600-MW this year.
The NTPC-run plant will be allowed to function till around October subject to a set of conditions including the emptying of its flyash pit within a time-frame and timely commissioning of the 400-KV Tughlaqabad sub-station by June 2018.
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