In the picturesque valleys and bustling cities of Jammu and Kashmir, where nature’s bounty has long been a source of pride, a silent crisis is unfolding, one that threatens the very essence of life and livelihood. The recent affidavit submitted by the Government of Jammu and Kashmir to the National Green Tribunal (NGT) lays bare a disheartening truth, the union territory is woefully unprepared to tackle the mounting challenges of solid waste management and wastewater treatment. Despite years of judicial directives, ambitious deadlines, and repeated assurances of “100% scientific disposal” the reality on the ground remains a patchwork of neglect, inefficiency, and environmental peril.
At the heart of the issue is the abject failure in handling solid waste. As per the affidavit, 21 urban local bodies (ULBs) across J&K still operate without even basic waste processing facilities, leaving communities to grapple with unchecked dumping. A staggering 22.52 lakh metric tonnes of legacy waste continues to accumulate, turning once-pristine landscapes into toxic eyesores. The government’s latest pledges of full waste processing in all ULBs by June 2026 and in Srinagar by March 2027 sound reassuring on paper, but they echo a familiar pattern of procrastination. History tells us otherwise, deadlines have been extended time and again, with little tangible progress. What passes for management today is nothing more than a crude system of waste relocation. Garbage is piled at one site until local protests erupt, only to be shifted to another unsuspecting neighbourhood. Residents in areas like Achan in Srinagar or the outskirts of Jammu endure unbearable stench, swarms of flies, and the constant threat of disease outbreaks. The dumping grounds are not just environmental blights, they are public health hazards that disproportionately affect the poor and marginalized.
The affidavit candidly admits that this remains the UT’s “biggest challenge” citing a severe lack of institutional capacity. Urban Environment Engineering Department (UEED), tasked with overseeing sewage and drainage across the vast expanse of J&K, operates with a skeletal staff of just 19 officers, a glaring indictment of misplaced priorities. Sewage from urban centre’s flows untreated into iconic water bodies like the Jhelum, Tawi, and Dal Lake, water bodies that have carried this burden since decades. Rapid urbanization and population growth have exacerbated the problem, pushing pollution levels to catastrophic heights. In J&K, where tourism and agriculture depend on clean rivers and lakes, negligence is not just shortsighted, it’s self-destructive.
What compounds the tragedy is the pervasive culture of impunity. No heads roll for missed deadlines; no agencies are penalized for repeated failures. The shortage of technical expertise in UEED, delays in project approvals, and the non-operational status of several sewage treatment plants (STPs) all stem from deeper issues of governance and intent. Waste management has been relegated to the periphery, addressed only under NGT pressure rather than as a core governance imperative. Citizens are left to suffer the consequences of polluted air, fouled water, and degraded living conditions while officials hide behind glossy presentations and statistical sleight-of-hand.
Jammu and Kashmir’s waste crisis is a public health emergency that demands immediate, accountable action. The government must enforce strict timelines with monthly progress reports, subjecting them to independent audits by environmental experts and civil society. Investments in infrastructure expansion UEED’s workforce, operationalizing STPs, and establishing scientific landfills should be prioritized in the budget.
J&K’s people deserve better than endless promises and a deteriorating environment. Clean water, safe waste disposal, and pollution-free surroundings are not optional luxuries; these are fundamental rights that underpin health, dignity, and sustainable development.

