An alarming situation is unfolding in Gurugram, where the eco-sensitive Aravalli Biodiversity Park is reportedly being used as an illegal dumping ground. Residents say large-scale dumping of garbage and construction and demolition (C&D) waste has been happening inside the protected zone for the past 8–10 months, raising serious environmental concerns.
The park, meant to preserve biodiversity and act as a green lung for the city, is now witnessing the opposite—mounds of debris, broken boundaries, and unchecked vehicle movement deep inside plantation areas.
Dumping Shifts After Crackdown Elsewhere
Residents claim that illegal dumping intensified after stricter enforcement was introduced along the Gurugram–Faridabad Road last year. With surveillance, fencing, and penalties making dumping difficult there, waste is now allegedly being diverted into the biodiversity park.
A ground inspection revealed tractors and trolleys entering through unauthorised dirt tracks, unloading debris in clear violation of environmental norms. These tracks reportedly pass through residential pockets like DLF Phase 3, allowing easy access to the park’s interior.
Night-Time Activity, No Surveillance
Locals say most dumping happens under the cover of darkness. The absence of CCTV cameras, guards, or any active monitoring system has made the park vulnerable to such activities.
Residents highlighted that boundary walls at multiple points have been broken or removed, making it easy for vehicles to enter. Even nearby municipal land is reportedly being used for dumping despite warning boards.
Environmentalists Flag Serious Violations
Environmental activists have called this a repeated failure of enforcement. They warn that unchecked dumping not only damages fragile ecosystems but also sets a dangerous precedent for misuse of protected land.
Concerns have also been raised about illegal borewells allegedly constructed inside the park—another serious violation in an eco-sensitive zone.
Authorities Promise Action
Officials from the Municipal Corporation of Gurugram have acknowledged the issue. Additional commissioner Ravindra Yadav said inspection teams will be sent, patrolling will be increased, and penalties will be imposed on violators.
Forest department officials also said they would coordinate with civic authorities to investigate and take corrective steps.

Bigger Question: Enforcement vs Intent
The situation highlights a recurring urban challenge—strict action in one area often pushes illegal activity into another. While Gurugram has taken steps to control dumping in certain zones, the lack of consistent monitoring has shifted the problem rather than solved it.
For residents and environmentalists, the demand is clear: stronger enforcement, proper waste management infrastructure, and real accountability to protect one of the city’s most vital ecological assets.
