The air in Pimpri Chinchwad just got a little cleaner — on paper, at least. The municipal corporation has sealed 14 Ready Mix Concrete plants between April 17 and 21, part of a special drive against establishments contributing to air pollution. A civic official confirmed that nuisance squad teams inspected over 60 RMC plants during the drive. Of these, 14 were found in serious violation of pollution norms and were immediately sealed. Seven others received warnings and were directed to comply.
The violations read like a checklist of industrial negligence: absence of dust suppression systems, lack of regular water sprinkling, open storage of raw materials, and failure to implement basic dust control measures such as displaying air quality indices at the site. A municipal environment department official stated that a circular mandating strict compliance was issued over two weeks ago. Following that, the enforcement drive launched. No further notices are being issued to plants found violating norms. They are directly being sealed. Urban environmental analysts note that RMC plants are among the most under-regulated sources of particulate matter in fast-growing urban peripheries. The dust they generate — from cement, sand, and aggregate handling — contains PM10 and PM2.5 particles that penetrate deep into lung tissue. The Maharashtra Pollution Control Board’s revised norms, issued in October 2025, require RMC plants to obtain Orange category clearance, maintain 200 metres distance from schools and hospitals, and 50 metres from residential areas. Plants must be fully enclosed, with covered storage, silos, conveyors, and mixing units. Tyre-washing facilities, CCTV surveillance, GPS tracking, and vehicle cleaning before exit are compulsory.
A senior official noted that the civic body had sealed 16 RMC plants earlier this year as well. The corporation now plans to ensure all such plants are registered with the PCMC, as most are currently registered only with the state board, leaving the municipal body without consolidated data. Many plants are temporarily set up by developers to support ongoing projects and are removed once work completes — making them difficult to track and regulate. For residents living near the sealed plants, the action brings temporary relief. But the deeper issue is systemic: construction-led urbanisation in Pimpri Chinchwad has outpaced enforcement capacity. Plants operating outside industrial zones are permitted only between 6 am and 10 pm. But without continuous monitoring, night-time violations go undetected. The municipal engineer and head of the environment department stated that RMC plants and construction projects must implement dust control measures, and that immediate action is being taken without compromise. The test will be whether the sealing of 14 plants becomes a turning point or a headline.
PCMC Seals 14 RMC Plants In Pollution Crackdown