Nityanand Jayaraman reports on corporate exploitation
of the most basic need of all.
In Chennai,
a major port city in southern India, two sister companies, French
multinationals Onyx and Vivendi, are working at cross-purposes.
While Vivendi is in partnership with civic authorities
to convert scarce fresh water from a public service to a commercial
product, Onyx collects the city's garbage and dumps it in one
of the most important freshwater ecosystems in the city. Chennai,
earlier known as Madras, is a city in the throes of a perennial
human-made water crisis. Over the last few decades, the city
grew its lakes and tanks were built upon, water courses were
blocked, rivers were converted into cesspools of human waste
and industrial
effluent, and residents and industries sucked the earth dry
by sinking deeper borewells running more powerful motors.
Amazingly,
experts maintain that if what remains of the citys vast
network of tanks and natural lakes is taken care of, the city
can be self-sufficient in water and even meet future needs.
The question, though, is if the water sources will be taken
care of.
The outlook
is depressing, especially because the same players entrusted
with improving the hygiene and sanitation in the city also stand
accused of degrading a large and critical freshwater wetland
in the city.
In March 2000,
C.E.S. Onyx, a Chennai-based company set up by Onyx, won a contract
with the Chennai Municipal Corporation to "manage"
the garbage and street litter from three key areas of the city.
At a cost of Rs. 650,000 (US$13,700), the company collects and
disposes at least 1000 tons of garbage everyday in and around
the freshwater wetlands of Pallikaranai towards the south of
the city.
Onyx is the
garbage management arm of the $40 billion French multinational
Vivendi Environment which has interests in water, transportation,
communications and energy. Vivendi is also the largest water
company in the world.
Onyx has won
praises from many Chennai residents for cleaning the streets.
For many of these residents, what happens to the garbage after
it leaves their streets is no problem of theirs.
Poisoning
a Lifeline
Barely 5 kilometers
from Onyx's office in Chennai, Vivendi has its office in Metrowater,
the city-owned water utility. Vivendi has a special consultancy
with Metrowater to help improve the management of water supply
and delivery to Chennaiites. K.A. Joseph, Vivendi's general
manager in Chennai, says "You can say our work is to show
Metrowater how to convert water from a service operation to
a commercial operation have more water, sell more water."
According to Joseph, "to have more water," it is imperative
to preserve existing water resources and minimize waste and
leakages.
The outlook
is depressing, especially because the same players entrusted
with improving the hygiene and sanitation in the city also stand
accused of degrading a large and critical freshwater wetland
in the city.
Onyx claims
to be one of the world's leaders in the management of industrial
and household wastes. According to Onyx's communication officer
Vidya Swaminathan, the company will bring in state-of-the-art
technology and expertise in the field of waste management.
However, Onyx's
operations in Chennai remain medieval. "We collect the
wastes from three zones in Chennai and dump it in Perungudi,"
says Swaminathan. The company dumps roughly 1000 tons -- a third
of Chennai's municipal waste -- everyday in Perungudi. Perungudi
is a low-lying area adjacent to Pallikaranai.
The reed-covered
swampy holding grounds of Pallikaranai store the rain water
and feed it through the year to several lakes located in the
south of Chennai. The shallow depression was carved over geologic
time by fast-moving water rushing seaward from the hills along
the coast. The swamps are also a wayside stop for migratory
birds and an important nesting area for more than 26 varieties
of birds.
According to
N.G. Anuthaman, a groundwater geologist from Chennai-based Anna
Universitys Centre for Water Resources, "The integrity
of the Pallikaranai wetlands is crucial for the water security
of south Chennai."
Effects
of Dumping
Municipal waste
dumping can have a deadly effect on water bodies. The rich organic
content in municipal wastes degrades over time to release highly
acidic and toxic leachates (the concentrated poisons from garbage).
In industrialized countries, municipal waste landfill
have special liners to protect these leachates from reaching
the groundwater. However, it is generally acknowledged even
by regulatory agencies such as the US EPA that even the best
engineered landfills eventually leak. ('New Evidence that All
Landfills Leak,' Rachels Environment & Health Weekly
#316. December 16, 1992.) Scientific studies indicate that
landfills can be a significant source of groundwater contamination.
Once contaminated, groundwater is virtually impossible to clean.
Where Onyx
dumps its garbage, there is no landfill, no liners, just low-lying
land. A visit by the author to the dumpyard revealed haphazard
disposal of solid wastes in and around the wetland.
Pools and rivulets of black, foul-smelling leachates were found
amidst burning piles of garbage.
Such conditions
are conducive for the release of some of the most toxic environmental
contaminants, including dioxins, furans and heavy metals (lead,
mercury, cadmium).
Return to
Sender
Ironically,
some of the areas such as Besant Nagar which are currently cleaned
by Onyx may be among those directly affected by groundwater
pollution due to dumping of wastes in Pallikaranai. "Pallikaranai
lends to surface water recharge [through percolation and lateral
movement] in Besant Nagar, Thiruvanmiyur and the newly developing
areas along the coast," says geologist Anuthaman.
Earlier this
year, the Tamilnadu Pollution Control Board served a notice
to Onyx for "dumping indiscriminately on wetlands."
According to Pollution Control Board chairperson Sheela Rani
Chunkath, "They [Onyx] haven't demarcated the areas allotted
for dumping. As a result, dumping happens everywhere, including
in the wetland. As a multinational company, they should know
better than to dump wastes in such sensitive areas."
Onyx's Swaminathan,
however, says that the decision to dump in Perungudi/Pallikaranai
was the Municipal Corporation's. "We cannot change that.
We're merely going by the contract with the Municipal Corporation.
Whatever the client wants, we can do," she says.
The attack
on Pallikaranai's water is not solely by Onyx. In fact, Onyx
is merely continuing the decade-long tradition of dumping on
wetlands. Earlier, the Municipal Corporation of Chennai dumped
the wastes here. Additionally, Metrowater, which also manages
the city's
sewage, discharges "treated" sewage water directly
into the wetlands.
It is little
wonder then that Chennai is now considering handing over the
city's water supply and distribution to private companies. No
matter what happens, residents lose, and private water
companies certainly stand to gain when freshwater resources
are spoilt.
Nityanad Jayaraman is the India organiser
for CorpWatch India. This article first appeared on CorpWatch
Indias website, http://www.corpwatchindia.org