Burning Mountains Of Trash
- connect2783
- Jun 22, 2023
- 2 min read
Updated: Jul 18
Kochi is grappling with toxic fumes from a fire at the Brahmapuram waste plant, worsening the city’s air quality. While this incident highlights the risks of poorly managed landfills, it’s far from an isolated case. Cities across India are dealing with similar fires. As waste management struggles, could innovative solutions like zero-landfill models and advanced technologies provide a way forward?

It’s been a week since the residents of Kochi started struggling to breathe as thick toxic fumes continue to spread from the Brahmapuram waste plant fire. Even though the fire has been completely doused, garbage continues to smoulder, adding to the smog. As a result, air quality in the port city has worsened and residents have started reporting breathing difficulties. High temperatures are being cited as the reason behind the fire; however, it is the thick layers of plastic underneath that got heated, preventing the fire at the top from being controlled.
This is not the first time an Indian city has reported a fire breaking out in a landfill. The massive fire at Delhi’s Bhalswa garbage dumpsite grabbed headlines in April 2022. In the same month, a major fire broke out in Chennai’s Perungudi and Chandigarh’s Dadumajra dumping grounds. Earlier this year, an accidental fire broke out in Mangalore’s Pachanady landfill. India has over 3100 landfills, and reports suggest the number of landfill fires has surged since 2015.
As per the Solid Waste Management Rules 2016, only non-recyclable, non-biodegradable, and non-combustible waste should go to a sanitary landfill.

But, due to lack of segregation, landfills receive mixed wastes, which include organic waste as well as ignitable material and plastics. Lack of scientific planning of landfill sites also poses a major challenge while extinguishing fire. There are multiple ignition points, and the lack of a constant water supply makes it a time-consuming process.
Many cities are now coming up with better waste management techniques to minimise landfill-related problems. Cities like Ambikapur, Chandrapur and Taliparamba have adopted a zero-landfill model which aims to minimise the need to construct new landfills. There are technologies for early detection using elevated subsurface temperatures and carbon monoxide levels and continuous surveillance which can help prevent such fires.
This is really concerning and sadly not surprising. You’ve shown how Kochi’s fire isn’t an isolated case but part of a much bigger pattern across India. The link to plastic buildup and rising temperatures makes it clear how deeply the waste crisis and climate stress are intertwined. What stands out most is the human impact—people struggling to breathe while surrounded by smouldering garbage. It’s a stark reminder that these “landfill fires” aren’t just environmental problems, they’re public health emergencies.
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