New Delhi: The National Green Tribunal has imposed an environmental compensation of Rs 3,500 crore on West Bengal for failure in the treatment of solid and liquid waste.


The green bench noted that the West Bengal government did not take much initiative in prioritising solid and sewage treatment plants in urban areas, news agency PTI reported.


The bench, headed by Justice Adarsh Kumar Goel, sought for remedial measures to be taken within six months.


The order stated that for failure in liquid waste management processing, "liability of the state is to pay compensation of Rs 2,980 crores, rounded off to Rs 3,000 crore in view of continuing damage." For failure to process solid waste, the compensation to be paid is Rs 500 crore, the NGT added.


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"Final amount of compensation under the two heads (solid and liquid waste) is assessed at Rs 3500 crore which may be deposited by the state of West Bengal in a separate ring-fenced account within two months," PTI quoted the September 1 order as informing.


The bench stated that the chief secretary may personally monitor the progress, at least once a month, while all district magistrates should oversee the status of compliance with environmental norms, at least once in two weeks.


“It is necessary to determine accountability for the past failures causing huge damage to the environment and public health and to meet cost of remediation," the NGT mentioned, as quoted by PTI.


The environmental body found that of the 2,758 million litres of sewage generation every day in urban local bodies in West Bengal, not more than 1,268 million litres is being treated. The work falls short of the project treatment capacity of 1505.85 million litres despite setting up several sewage treatment plants.


It said, "At Least three major cities and as many major towns as possible in the state and at least three Panchayats in every district may be notified on the website within two weeks as model cities/towns/villages which will be made fully compliant within the next six months.”


The remaining cities, towns and village panchayats of the state may be made fully compliant in respect of environmental norms within one year, the bench said in its directive to the state.


Environmentalist Subhas Dutta, who had been instrumental in bringing to the NGT's notice several pollution cases in the past, told PTI, "We are extremely happy with this order. Let the state earmark and spend some money for the people and posterity instead of spending money to buy votes."


He hoped for the state to prioritise the environmental aspects henceforth and advocated "judicial monitoring of the money to be spent. Otherwise, it may inflate the coffers of influential persons."


(With Agency Inputs)