Nagpur: The Nagpur Municipal Corporation’s (NMC) ambitious claim of halting fresh dumping at Bhandewadi was undermined by its own official figures. Data for January 2026 reveals that barely 44% of the city’s total rubbish generation was sent for processing, casting serious doubts over the civic body’s “zero dumping” assertion.Nagpur generates around 1,500 metric tonnes (MT) of municipal solid waste every day. In a 31-day month, this amounts to approximately 46,500 MT. However, records from the solid waste management department show that only 20,275.34 MT was handed over in January to 2 processing agencies by AG Enviro and BVG India, the firms responsible for door-to-door rubbish collection. This translated to just 43.6% of the total waste generated during the month.In December last year, municipal commissioner Abhijeet Chaudhari publicly announced that no fresh rubbish would be dumped at the Bhandewadi landfill and that 100% of the city’s waste would be scientifically processed. The declaration was presented as a major reform aimed at easing the mounting pressure on the already overburdened dumping yard.Yet, January’s transportation data tells a different story. Official records show that 12,995.13 MT of waste was transported in 2,363 trips in 1 operational segment alone. Daily figures peaked at 824.63 MT on January 20 and 638.92 MT on January 29, with multiple other days crossing the 600 MT mark. A second segment recorded another 7,280.21 MT carried in 1,014 trips during the same period.While there were a few days with no recorded entries, the broader pattern indicates sustained and large-scale transportation of waste to Bhandewadi throughout the month.If only 44% of the waste was processed, nearly 26,000 MT generated in January remains outside the processing stream. Sources indicate that a substantial portion of this untreated rubbish continues to be dumped at the landfill site, which is already laden with legacy waste and prone to frequent fire incidents and pollution hazards.Officials, however, maintain that the situation will improve once the integrated compressed bio-gas (CBG) plant being developed by SusBde LOC Nagpur Private Ltd on a 30-acre site becomes operational, likely by mid-March. They claim the facility will significantly reduce the burden on the landfill.Until then, the data exposes a glaring gap between civic claims and ground reality, putting NMC’s waste management narrative under sharp public scrutiny.

