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Central Pollution

Control Board
The Water (Prevention and Control of
Pollution) Act, 1974
Introduction
• Central pollution control board was established under statutory provisions of
water(prevention &control of pollution) Act, 1974with main objective of maintaining or
restoring of wholesomeness of water.

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What is it for?
An Act to provide for the prevention
and control of water pollution
the maintaining or restoring of
wholesomeness of water.

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Features of Act

It has provision for It also makes


It provides for It provides for the
It confers them with funds, budgets, provision for various
maintenance and establishment of
powers and accounts and audit penalties for the
restoration of quality central and state
functions to control of the central and defaulters and
of all types of surface boards of pollution
pollution. state pollution procedure for the
and ground water. control.
control boards. same.

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Application and Commencement
• It applies in the first instance to the whole of the States of Assam, Gujarat,
Haryana, Himachal Pradesh, Jammu and Kashmir, Karnataka, Kerala, Madhya
Pradesh, Rajasthan and West Bengal and the Union Territories.

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Central Pollution Control Board
• It is the main governmental
organization at central level
for prevention and control
of water pollution.

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CPCB’sObjectives
• It advises the central government in matters related to prevention and control
of water pollution.
• All the state pollution control boards (SPCBs) are guided and technically
assisted by CPCB.
• It organizes training programs for prevention and control of pollution at
various places
(seminars).
• It also organizes comprehensive programs on pollution related issues through
mass media.
• It collects, compiles and publishes technical and statistical data related to
pollution.

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CPCB’sObjectives
• It prepares manuals for treatment and disposal of sewage and trade effluents.
• Lays down standards for water quality parameters.
• It plans nation-wide programs for prevention, control or abatement of
pollution.
• It establishes and recognizes laboratories for analysis of water, sewage or trade
effluent samples.

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STATEPOLLUTION
CONTROLBOARD
The state pollution control boards
(SPCBs) also have similar functions
to be executed at state level and are
governed by the directions of CPCB.

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SPCB’s objectives
• The board advices the state government with respect to the locations of any
industry that might pollute a stream, well or any water body.
• It lays down standard for effluents and is empowered to take samples from
any stream, well or trade effluent or sewage passing through an industry.
• The state board is empowered to take legal samples of trade effluent in
accordance with the procedure laid down in the act. The sample taken in the
presence of the occupier or his agent is divided into 2 parts, sealed, signed by
both parties and sent for analysis to some recognized labs. If the samples do
not conform to the prescribed water quality standards (crossing maximum
permissible limits), then ‘consent’ is refused to the unit.

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SPCB’s objectives
• Every industry has to obtain consent from the Board (granted for a fixed
duration) by applying on a prescribed Proforma providing all technical
details, along with a prescribed fee following which analysis of the effluent is
carried out.
• The Board suggests efficient methods for utilization, treatment and disposal of
trade effluents.

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Identification of Polluted Water Bodies
• CPCBidentified 10 polluted stretches for prioritising pollution control efforts
in 1988-89.
• The Number of Stretches increased to 37 during 1992-93.
• The list is now revised to include 86 stretches (by 2011)
• The concerned State Pollution Control Boards were asked to take adequate
measures to restore the desired level.

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GAP
• GangaAction Plan (GAP) Phase-I was launched in the year 1985 to improve
the water quality of river Ganga and was completed in March 2000.
• Diversion and treatment of domestic sewage and present toxic and industrial
chemical wastes from identified grossly polluting units entering in to the river.
The other objectives of the GangaAction Plan are as under.
• Control of non-point pollution from agricultural run off, human defecation, cattle
wallowing and throwing of unburnt and half burnt bodies into the river.
• Research and Development to conserve the biotic, diversity of the river to augment its
productivity.
• New technology of sewage treatment like Up-flowAnaerobic Sludge Blanket (UASB)
and sewage treatment through afforestation has been successfully developed.
• Resource recovery options like production of methane for energy generation and use
of aquaculture for revenue generation have been demonstrated.
• To act as trend setter for taking up similar action plans in other grossly polluted
stretches in otherrivers.
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Contd..
• Phase-II of the programme was approved
in stages from 1993 onwards which
included tributaries of the river Ganga
namely, Yamuna, Gomti, Damodar and
Mahananda.
• Pollution abatement works undertaken
include,
• interception and diversion of raw sewage,
• setting up of sewage treatment plants,
creation of low cost sanitation facilities,
• setting up of electric/improved wood
crematoria and river front development.

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Contd…
• GAP Phase–II is currently under implementation. An expenditure of Rs. 896.05
crore has been incurred so far on Ganga under GAP and sewage treatment
capacity of 1064 mld (million litres per day) has been created.

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Comparision of pollution load generation from domestic and industrial sources

25000
22900
Industrial Domestic

20000

15000
13468

10000 9478

5000 4580
3510

1776

0
Wastewater gen(mld) BOD Generation (t/d) BOD Discharge (t/d)

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Thank you
presented by
T.Sruthi(10036)

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