People bathing on the river bank. Boat ride at Yamuna river by the participants during the third training programme on river pollution and decentralised wastewater treatment – alternatives, held in between 16 to 20th of January 2006.
People bathing on the river bank. Boat ride at Yamuna river by the participants during the third training programme on river pollution and decentralised wastewater treatment – alternatives, held in between 16 to 20th of January 2006.
Boat ride at Yamuna river by the participants during the third training programme on river pollution and decentralised wastewater treatment – alternatives, held in between 16 to 20th of January 2006.
Crematorium on the river bank. Boat ride at Yamuna river by the participants during the third training programme on river pollution and decentralised wastewater treatment – alternatives, held in between 16 to 20th of January 2006.
People bathing on the river bank. Boat ride at Yamuna river by the participants during the third training programme on river pollution and decentralised wastewater treatment – alternatives, held in between 16 to 20th of January 2006.
Boat ride at Yamuna river by the participants during the third training programme on river pollution and decentralised wastewater treatment – alternatives, held in between 16 to 20th of January 2006.
Boat ride at Yamuna river by the participants during the third training programme on river pollution and decentralised wastewater treatment – alternatives, held in between 16 to 20th of January 2006.
Highly polluted Yamuna river. Boat ride at Yamuna river by the participants during the third training programme on river pollution and decentralised wastewater treatment – alternatives, held in between 16 to 20th of January 2006.
Boat ride at Yamuna river by the participants during the third training programme on river pollution and decentralised wastewater treatment – alternatives, held in between 16 to 20th of January 2006.
Chila regulator – visit by the participants during the third training programme on river pollution and decentralised wastewater treatment – alternatives, held in between 16 to 20th of January 2006
Chila regulator – visit by the participants during the third training programme on river pollution and decentralised wastewater treatment – alternatives, held in between 16 to 20th of January 2006
This is the Yamuna river in the national capital of India. Devotees observed yet another Chhath standing amid toxic froth in the river on the evening of November 10, 2021. Their photographs raised a storm of controversy again about the ‘ecologically dead’ river .
This is the Yamuna river in the national capital of India. Devotees observed yet another Chhath standing amid toxic froth in the river on the evening of November 10, 2021. Their photographs raised a storm of controversy again about the ‘ecologically dead’ river .
This is the Yamuna river in the national capital of India. Devotees observed yet another Chhath standing amid toxic froth in the river on the evening of November 10, 2021. Their photographs raised a storm of controversy again about the ‘ecologically dead’ river .
This is the Yamuna river in the national capital of India. Devotees observed yet another Chhath standing amid toxic froth in the river on the evening of November 10, 2021. Their photographs raised a storm of controversy again about the ‘ecologically dead’ river .
This is the Yamuna river in the national capital of India. Devotees observed yet another Chhath standing amid toxic froth in the river on the evening of November 10, 2021. Their photographs raised a storm of controversy again about the ‘ecologically dead’ river .
This is the Yamuna river in the national capital of India. Devotees observed yet another Chhath standing amid toxic froth in the river on the evening of November 10, 2021. Their photographs raised a storm of controversy again about the ‘ecologically dead’ river .
The froth was caused at this time of the year due to the lean water flow in the river. After the construction of the Hathnikund barrage upstream in Haryana, the flow downstream is now just 160 cusecs which cannot dilute effluents, which consequently build up in the form of foam.
This is the Yamuna river in the national capital of India. Devotees observed yet another Chhath standing amid toxic froth in the river on the evening of November 10, 2021. Their photographs raised a storm of controversy again about the ‘ecologically dead’ river .
This is the Yamuna river in the national capital of India. Devotees observed yet another Chhath standing amid toxic froth in the river on the evening of November 10, 2021. Their photographs raised a storm of controversy again about the ‘ecologically dead’ river .
Effluents are discharged in the Yamuna from all its riparian states. According to the Monitoring Committee for the Rejuvenation of the River Yamuna in Delhi and the National Capital Region, the 22 kilometre stretch of the Yamuna in Delhi contributes to 76 percent of the river’s total pollution load. According to its Fifth Report, industrial towns upstream such as Yamunanagar, Jagadhri and Panipat also release millions of litres of effluents every day into the river. Chadha has claimed that paper and sugar mills in western Uttar Pradesh towns such as Meerut, Shamli, Saharanpur and Muzaffarnagar also do the same.
Effluents are discharged in the Yamuna from all its riparian states. According to the Monitoring Committee for the Rejuvenation of the River Yamuna in Delhi and the National Capital Region, the 22 kilometre stretch of the Yamuna in Delhi contributes to 76 percent of the river’s total pollution load. According to its Fifth Report, industrial towns upstream such as Yamunanagar, Jagadhri and Panipat also release millions of litres of effluents every day into the river. Chadha has claimed that paper and sugar mills in western Uttar Pradesh towns such as Meerut, Shamli, Saharanpur and Muzaffarnagar also do the same.
Effluents are discharged in the Yamuna from all its riparian states. According to the Monitoring Committee for the Rejuvenation of the River Yamuna in Delhi and the National Capital Region, the 22 kilometre stretch of the Yamuna in Delhi contributes to 76 percent of the river’s total pollution load. According to its Fifth Report, industrial towns upstream such as Yamunanagar, Jagadhri and Panipat also release millions of litres of effluents every day into the river. Chadha has claimed that paper and sugar mills in western Uttar Pradesh towns such as Meerut, Shamli, Saharanpur and Muzaffarnagar also do the same.