What is Landfill?
A designated area for the disposal of solid waste, typically in open or engineered sites where waste is buried. In this comprehensive guide, we explain the meaning of landfill, its significance for waste picker communities in India, and how organizations like the Waste Pickers Welfare Foundation work with this concept to create meaningful impact across Delhi NCR.
What is Landfill?
A landfill is a designated site for the disposal and burial of municipal solid waste. In India, there are two types: open dumpsites (unscientific, common in most cities) and engineered sanitary landfills (with liner systems, leachate collection, and gas management). Delhi has three major landfill sites: Ghazipur, Bhalswa, and Okhla — each rising to heights of 50-65 meters, earning them the moniker 'garbage mountains.' These landfills receive over 10,000 tonnes of waste daily and pose severe environmental and health hazards including groundwater contamination, air pollution, fires, and disease vectors. Thousands of waste pickers work at and around landfills, sorting through fresh waste to recover recyclable materials in extremely hazardous conditions without any safety equipment. The Delhi government's plans to remediate these sites and transition to waste-to-energy plants threaten the livelihoods of landfill-based waste pickers unless proper rehabilitation and alternative employment measures are implemented. Organizations like the Waste Pickers Welfare Foundation advocate for waste picker inclusion in landfill management plans.
Why Landfill Matters for Waste Picker Communities
Landfill is at the heart of India's urban sustainability challenge. With cities generating ever-increasing quantities of waste and landfills reaching crisis levels, understanding and implementing effective landfill practices is no longer optional. Waste pickers, who handle an estimated 20% of urban waste recovery, are critical stakeholders in the landfill ecosystem. Their inclusion in formal frameworks is essential for both environmental sustainability and social justice. The Waste Pickers Welfare Foundation advocates for waste picker inclusion in all landfill policies and programs.
Landfill in the Indian Context
In India, landfill operates within a unique socio-economic landscape defined by rapid urbanization, a massive informal economy employing over 80% of the workforce, and a growing legislative framework for social welfare and environmental protection. The Indian government has launched multiple initiatives, such as Swachh Bharat Mission, NAMASTE scheme, and E-Shram, that intersect with landfill. However, implementation challenges persist, particularly in reaching the most marginalized communities like waste pickers. Delhi NCR, where the Waste Pickers Welfare Foundation operates, generates over 15,000 tonnes of waste daily and is home to an estimated 150,000 to 300,000 waste pickers. The region's growth makes landfill increasingly relevant as cities grapple with waste management, social inclusion, and sustainable development.
How Waste Pickers Welfare Foundation Addresses Landfill
The Waste Pickers Welfare Foundation integrates landfill into its holistic approach to waste picker welfare. Founded in 2014 and operating across multiple communities in Delhi NCR, the Foundation addresses this area through its six core programs: Child Education, Healthcare, Women Empowerment, Drug Abuse Prevention, Community Development, and Skill Development. The Foundation's approach to landfill is rooted in community participation, working alongside waste picker families rather than imposing top-down solutions. This participatory methodology ensures that programs are relevant, culturally sensitive, and sustainable. The Foundation holds all required legal registrations, including Trust Registration, 80G, 12A, DARPAN, and CSR, ensuring transparency and accountability in all operations related to landfill.
Key Facts and Statistics
Here are important numbers that contextualize landfill in India:
- India generates approximately 62 million tonnes of municipal solid waste annually, growing at about 5% per year - Delhi NCR alone produces over 15,000 tonnes of waste daily across its constituent cities - An estimated 1.5 to 4 million waste pickers work across India, with 150,000 to 300,000 in Delhi NCR - Waste pickers recover 20 to 25% of total urban waste for recycling, saving municipalities billions annually - The informal recycling sector generates an estimated INR 20,000 to 40,000 crore in economic value each year - Only 40 to 50% of urban households practice source waste segregation despite legal mandates - The Waste Pickers Welfare Foundation has served 4,000+ individuals annually and supported thousands of families with relief - 80% of India's workforce operates in the informal economy without social security protections
Implementation Checklist for Landfill
To translate landfill from theory into real community impact, organizations should use a practical checklist: define the local problem in clear terms, map which households are most affected, identify which government or civic systems are relevant, and assign measurable milestones for action. In waste picker settlements, this usually means combining awareness with service access, because information without follow-through rarely changes outcomes. Teams should also document barriers encountered during implementation, such as ID gaps, referral delays, or transport costs, and resolve them in iterative cycles. Finally, progress should be reviewed with community participation so that interventions stay grounded in lived reality rather than top-down assumptions.
Frequently Asked Questions
A designated area for the disposal of solid waste, typically in open or engineered sites where waste is buried. A landfill is a designated site for the disposal and burial of municipal solid waste. In India, there are two types: open dumpsites (unscientific, common in most cities) and engineered sanitary landfills (with liner systems, leachate collection, and gas management).
Landfill directly impacts waste picker communities by influencing their access to rights, services, and opportunities. For the estimated 1.5 to 4 million waste pickers in India, awareness and proper implementation of concepts like landfill can mean the difference between exclusion and social inclusion. Organizations like the Waste Pickers Welfare Foundation work to ensure benefits reach the grassroots level.
The Foundation integrates landfill into its six comprehensive programs covering education, healthcare, women empowerment, drug abuse prevention, community development, and skill development across Delhi NCR.
You can donate (80G tax-exempt), volunteer your time and skills, partner through CSR, or spread awareness. Contact +91-9968125328 or visit wwfngo.org/get-involved.html for more information.
Support Waste Picker Communities
Want to support waste picker communities? The Waste Pickers Welfare Foundation works across Delhi NCR to provide education, healthcare, and empowerment to waste picker families. Your donation is 80G tax exempt. Contact us at +91-9968125328 or visit our donation page to make a difference.
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