Delhi Environment Minister Manjinder Singh Sirsa on Tuesday said the Bhalswa landfill will be cleared by March 2026 and asserted that no new "mountain of garbage" would be created in the future in the national capital.
The minister said that 35 per cent of waste has already been cleared at the landfill and thanked Lt Governor Vinai Kumar Saxena for his "efforts in clearing Delhi of all three mountains of garbage at Bhalswa, Okhla, and Ghazipur."
"The Bhalswa landfill was once a 70-acre mountain of garbage. Since the LG has started work on this project, nearly 35 per cent of the waste has been removed. "Of the 70 acres, 25-acre land has been reclaimed, and today, we have planted 2,000 bamboo saplings on five acres of reclaimed land," Sirsa said during a bamboo plantation drive here.
According to the minister, the height of the garbage mound at Bhalswa landfill has been reduced to 53 metres, which once was 60 metres.
"By December 2025, the waste will be reduced to a point where it will no longer be visible (from a distance). The Bhalswa landfill will be completely cleared by March 2026. Our biggest goal is to ensure that work continues at all three landfill sites, preventing the formation of new mountains of garbage," he said.
He said that Prime Minister Narendra Modi has emphasised the importance of keeping Delhi clean by stopping waste accumulation at landfill sites and ensuring efficient waste recycling.