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Water Supply

Call to create awareness on water conservation

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Source : The Hindu Date : 17.06.2009

Call to create awareness on water conservation

Staff Reporter

Projects fail because of vested interests: official

 


Thrissur has 4.5 lakh wells for 6 lakh households

Rainwater structures need to be well-maintained


Thrissur: Unrealistic policies and people’s indifference are the major hurdles in the way of water conservation, Nivedita P. Haran, Principal Secretary, Revenue and Disaster Management, has said.

Delivering the keynote address at the Southern Regional Forum of Water Community at the Kerala Institute of Local Administration here on Tuesday, she said that many projects failed because of the vested interests of policy makers and implementing agencies.

“Policy makers seldom go out and study grassroots problems or meet target groups. As a result, projects do not yield desired results. Hardly any project finishes on time. Nobody is accountable for the indefinite delay,” Ms. Haran said.

She said that a change in attitude, policies and implementation process was needed to achieve the goals in water resources projects.

Along with the conservation of water bodies, optimum utilisation of water too should be ensured, she said. Major drinking water projects do not cover even 10 per cent of target groups, Ms. Haran noted.

Speakers at the meeting stressed on the need to create awareness about water conservation.

Most often, rainwater structures had been maintained just to satisfy building rules, they noted.

Indiscriminate sand-mining and pollution have sounded the death knell of many rivers. River management funds are being used to construct roads leading to rivers, and this in turn helped the sand mafia reach river banks easily.

Ponds, wells and paddy fields were being filled by the land mafia resulting in floods and water-logging, the meeting observed.

Speaking on the district administration’s ambitious project Mazhppolima, a participatory well recharge programme, District Collector V. K. Baby pointed out that the objective of the project was to enhance health and welfare of the people through improved access to safe drinking water.

The community-driven project had given thrust to recharging groundwater table for sustainable water supply, he said. The district has about 4.5 lakh wells for six lakh households. The total cost of about Rs. 92 crore would largely be met by the households themselves, the collector said.

The District Administration was holding the two-day meeting of the water community in association with the United Nations Solution Exchange.

The UN’s Solution Exchange initiative builds Communities of Practice by connecting people with similar concerns and interests through email groups and face-to- face interactions.

The objective is to harness the country’s vast knowledge pool.

Water is one of the eleven Communities of Practice established by the UN’s Solution Exchange. Therambil Ramakrishnan, MLA, inaugurated the forum.

Scientists and activists from different parts of the country are taking part in it.

Last Updated on Wednesday, 17 June 2009 09:36
 

‘A wake-up call over water issues’

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Source : The Hindu Date : 14.06.2009

‘A wake-up call over water issues’

Staff Reporter

NEW DELHI: Noted environmentalist Vandana Shiva released a new book, “The Real Thing: Coke’s Bumpy Ride Through India” authored by Nantoo Banerjee, at a function here over the weekend.

Speaking on the occasion, Dr. Shiva pointed out that sources of water across the country were either disappearing or getting polluted. “I want to congratulate Nantoo for pulling so much together. This book is a wake-up call on the water issue. I will recommend this book by sending it to all my colleagues. At railway stations one doesn’t get tap water any more, therefore passengers are forced to buy either mineral water or a cold drink.”

Describing the book as a well-researched look into the operation of a major multinational, Nantoo Banerjee said the cold drink plants in “water-starved” cities like Delhi, Mumbai, Chennai and Bangalore couldn’t have been set up without connivance of politicians and bureaucrats. “All the plants are exploiting and transporting precious water for commercial use. Water is the lifeline of our country and it is sad that it is being exploited so cheaply without paying any revenue to the Government. … We don’t have a regulatory authority to stop cola companies from exploiting our resources. We need one million Vandana Shivas in the country to force people in the corridors of power to set up a regulatory enterprise.”

Stating that penning a book was always in his mind when he joined a cola company, Mr. Banerjee said: “I am not an intellectual; I am a reporter and an observer. I have been a business journalist for over three decades. When I got a job to work in the MNC I was really excited. What I saw during my working days was alarming. The balance-sheet in India and China of this MNC is growing because there is no regulatory authority.”

Described as a non-fiction real life story of the US-based cola company’s long troubled business journey in the country, the book is a case study of the operation of a major multinational. It highlights the closure of its Kerala plant following its expose as a groundwater guzzler and the company’s fight with environmentalists and social activists.

Last Updated on Monday, 15 June 2009 09:18
 

Water released to Masula and Pedana

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Source : The Hindu Date : 14.06.2009

Water released to Masula and Pedana

Special Correspondent

The decision taken at Zilla Parishad general body meeting held earlier

 


About 70 cusecs of water released into Krishna Eastern Main Canal

Authorities may release 2,000 cusecs from Nagarjuna Sagar


— PHOTO: CH. VIJAYA BHASKAR

MLAs Malladi Vishnu,Jogi Ramesh, DY Das and ZP Chairman K Nageswara Rao helping Minister for Animal Husbandry K Parthasarodhy (third from left) manually releasing water into the Krishna Eastran Main Canal in Vijayawada on Saturday.

VIJAYAWADA: Minister for Animal Husbandry K. Parthasarodhy flipped the switch to open the shutters of the Krishna Eastern Main Canal head sluice to release drinking water for Machilipatnam and Pedana municipalities on Saturday.

About 70 cusecs of water was released into the Krishna Eastern Main Canal in accordance with the resolution of the Irrigation Advisory Board last week. Though the resolution said that drinking water should be released from Prakasam Barrage on June 15 the release was advanced after the issue became a topic of hot debate in the Zilla Parishad general body meeting held in Machilipatnam on Friday. Machilipatnam and Pedana MLAs reportedly insisted that the water be released in such away that it was available to the people on June 15.

Though officials of the Vijayawada Irrigation Circle preferred that the water be released on Friday night the programme was postponed to this morning.

The irrigation authorities said that 2,000 cusecs would be released from Nagarjuna Sagar to begin with and then the discharge would be reduced to 300 cusecs in preparation for the release of water for drinking purposes on June 15 and for the khariff season on June 20.

While the level of water in Nagarjuna Sagar and Srisailam is close to the Dead Storage Level the Irrigation authorities are hoping that the monsoon will become active over the catchment area and the reservoirs would be filled this week itself.

The Minister said that he was hopeful that the monsoon would become active and the agricultural activity would not be delayed. In charge superintending engineer Sankara Rao and other officials of the irrigation were present.

Last Updated on Monday, 15 June 2009 07:57
 


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