Barriers to be installed in Mumbai to stop flow of plastic waste into sea
   Date :12-Feb-2026

Barriers to be installed in Mumbai to stop flow of plastic waste into sea
 
NEW DELHI :
 
AT LEAST 61 tonnes of plastic is expected to be recovered every year from Trombay and Malad waterways in Mumbai, where barriers will be installed in phases to stop the flow of plastic waste into the Arabian Sea and the Indian Ocean, officials said on Tuesday. The initiative is being led by The Ocean Cleanup, a Netherlands-based non-profit organisation that develops technologies to remove plastic from the oceans, in collaboration with the Municipal Corporation of Greater Mumbai and the Maharashtra Pollution Control Board (MPCB). “Mumbai will witness the deployment of barriers to stop the flow of plastic waste into the Arabian Sea and the Indian Ocean. The first deployments will focus on the Trombay and Malad waterways, identified through a data-driven analysis as significant contributors to ocean-bound plastic waste.
 
“The technology is scheduled for deployment over 2026. Once operational, these initial systems are expected to recover 61 to 92 tonnes of plastic per year. Research found that 80 per cent of marine litter along India’s coastlines is made up of plastic,” the Ocean Cleanup said in a statement. The deployment, which will kick off before the monsoon season arrives, will take place in phases. According to a survey conducted by the Ocean Cleanup, Mumbai releases about 5 million kg of plastic waste into the Arabian Sea and the Indian Ocean annually, impacting 220 km of the coastline, 152 sq km of mangroves, 107 protected species and nearly 1.9 million livelihoods dependent on coastal and marine ecosystems.