City
Epaper

Huge quantity of flowers gone to waste at Chennai wholesale market due to poor demand, continuous rain

By ANI | Updated: November 8, 2021 04:45 IST

A huge quantity of flowers went to waste at Koyambedu wholesale market in Tamil Nadu's Chennai due to poor demand caused by the COVID-19 pandemic and continuous rain.

Open in App

A huge quantity of flowers went to waste at Koyambedu wholesale market in Tamil Nadu's Chennai due to poor demand caused by the COVID-19 pandemic and continuous rain.

Speaking to ANI, Sambath, Vice-President of Flower Sellers Body in Koyambedu market said, "We are facing losses only on this Diwali. We are unable to sell flowers even for Rs 10. Think about the expenditure on lorry rental, labours, electricity bill, shop rent etc. Every day, we are dumping them in the waste."

Apart from heavy rainfall, COVID-19 restrictions is another reason behind less demand for flowers.

"Due to heavy rainfall and Covid-19 restrictions of the time limit in Koyambedu market, we have been facing only losses in flower sales," Ramesh, a seller said.

Another seller, NS Mani said, "Previously, I was selling outside the market. Now, I am selling flowers in the Koyambedu market. Here, expenditure is high and sales are very low. There are 400 flowers shops in Koyambedu market. But these days, we are facing losses only."

Several parts of Chennai reported extensive waterlogging on Sunday morning after the city recorded heavy overnight rains.

( With inputs from ANI )

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: Flower sellers body
Open in App

National Realted Stories

NationalWrit petition in Madras HC seeking probe into Annamalai’s claim on Anna University sexual assault case

NationalDelhi Minister Sood greets firefighters ahead of their departure for Fire Games 2025 in US

NationalIndiGo Flight Makes Emergency Landing in Bengaluru After Mayday Call Over Low Fuel: Reports

NationalDelhi CM leads 'Yoga with Yamuna' event, ministers head separate sessions

NationalSince 1971, India never accepted any outside mediation: Ex-Army chief V.P. Malik debunks Trump’s ceasefire claims