Hell For Leather
[Business World]
Published date: 22 Dec 2018
Hell for leather means to run very fast, but the leather industry in and around Kanpur has nowhere to run. Hundreds of tanneries and manufacturing units in Kanpur’s Jajmau quarter, and the clusters of Banthar and Unnau as you drive towards Lucknow, are to tering as they try to balance between gaumata and Mother Ganga.
Both the industry and the government have failed, over many decades, to develop clean, ecologically friendly standards. The Uttar Pradesh Leather Industries Association (UP-LIA) says it is under siege, and the Yogi Adityanath administration seems indifferent to its plight. What are the facts?
India’s leather and leather product exports slipped only 2.4 per cent to $3.89 billion in April-December 2018 year-on-year. This is a very small fraction, 1.6 per cent, of lndia’s total merchandise exports of $245.44 billion in the same nine-month period. Chennai and Kolkata are also major leather-producing centres; Kanpur’s tanneries, many small in size and employing a few dozen workers, mainly process buffalo and goat skins.
Kanpur’s pollution is not caused only by the tanneries. The city’s three mil lion crowded inhabitants have been neglected by successive state governments. Kanpur has decrepit infrastructure, appalling roads and shocking sewerage; it produces about 450 million litres a day (MLD) of sewage, only a third of which is processed and mostly flows down turbid and open nullahs. Be sides sewage, the Ganga near Kanpur is also be fouled by paper and sugar mills and poorly regulated factories.
The tanneries agreed many years ago to process their own waste water before it was discharged into the river. A series of four interceptor stations was meant to separate solid waste before sending the untreated water to a Central Effluent Treatment Plant (CETP). Over the years, however, the system has been overwhelmed by the waste. A second CETP is planned but funding has not been finalised.
Pilgrims bathing in the river, as well as bodies and ash from cremations, all add to the ocean of pollution that pours into the sacred water. This year, the UP government ordered the closure of all tanneries for three months from mid December in view of the Kumbh Mela. Anwarul Haq, UPLIA president, said this came as a shock because the tanneries used to cease operations three days before each of the six shahi snans or holiest bathing days that punctuate the Kumbh starting from Makar Sankranti on January15 and stretching until March 4.
The total shutdown of between 264 and 400 tanneries, depending on whom you speak with, led to thousands of casual workers migrating to other employment. The wood in the tanks where hides are first chemically treated is drying and cracking with disuse. And the CETP is still choked by ‘regular’ sewage from Kanpur’s open drains.
It seems like Mission Impossible. The central government committed Rs 20,000 crore over five years to end-2020 for cleaning the Ganga, but the Namami Gange project has been slow and largely ineffectual.
Only Rs 6,820 crore has been released since 2011-12, of which merely Rs 5,449 crore has been spent. Close to another Rs 20,000 crore has been sanctioned for 131 sewerage projects along the 2,500 km-long river, but only 560 of a planned 3,083 MLD of new sewage treatment capacity is up and working, and only 2,268 of 4,871km of sewerage lines have been laid.
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