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Haryana

  • 03 Feb 2025
  • 3 min read
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Ghaggar Water

Why in News? 

A joint committee constituted by the National Green Tribunal (NGT) found that Ghaggar river water remains unsuitable for bathing. The committee detected biochemical oxygen demand (BOD) levels in the river exceeding the prescribed limit.

Key Points 

  • Survey and Sample Collection: 
    • Committee members and department representatives conducted a survey in December 2023, to identify pollution sources in Sukhna Choe. 
    • The survey revealed that slums near Mansa Devi Complex, Rajiv Colony, and Indira Colony in Haryana, as well as near Sohi Banquet Hall, were directly discharging solid and liquid waste into the choe. 
    • The committee took samples from the Panchkula drain at the Vikas Nagar Bridge, which showed that BOD (Biochemical Oxygen Demand) and TSS (Total Suspended Solids) levels exceeded environmental standards for inland surface water discharge. 
  • Pollution Levels in Ghaggar River: 
    • The committee collected water samples from upstream and downstream of Ghaggar River, near the Ambala-Chandigarh Highway Bridge in Zirakpur, where Sukhna Choe merges with it. 
    • Findings: 
      • pH values were within the acceptable range for outdoor bathing. 
      • BOD levels failed to meet the primary water quality criteria for outdoor bathing at both locations. 
    • Recommendations:  
    • Municipal Corporation of Chandigarh should: 
      • Ensure regular cleaning of drains. 
      • Instalment of iron nets at culvert points where roads cross the drain to prevent solid waste dumping. 
    • Pollution Control Board should: 
    • Panchkula Municipal Corporation should: 
      • Ensure STPs operate efficiently, preventing untreated effluent from entering Sukhna Choe through drains. 

Biochemical Oxygen Demand (BOD)  

  • BOD is the amount of dissolved oxygen used by microorganisms in the biological process of metabolizing organic matter in water.  
  • The more organic matter there is (e.g., in sewage and polluted bodies of water), the greater the BOD; and the greater the BOD, the lower the amount of dissolved oxygen available for higher animals such as fishes.  
  • The BOD is therefore a reliable gauge of the organic pollution of a body of water. 


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