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Water Supply

Water to be supplied once in four days

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The Hindu            05.02.2014

Water to be supplied once in four days

TURNING DEARER:Every drop of water counts now.— Photo: S. James
TURNING DEARER:Every drop of water counts now.— Photo: S. James

To overcome water crisis, the Madurai Corporation will implement a new water distribution plan from February 6 (Thursday).

Drinking water will be supplied once in four days in view of the falling water level in Vaigai dam. Authorities are identifying private sources outside the city to ensure water supply during summer.

Addressing a joint press conference here on Tuesday, Mayor V.V. Rajan Chellappa and Commissioner Kiran Gurrala said a ward-wise distribution plan had been prepared by dividing the city into two zones.

“The timings of water supply for every locality were worked out. We have no other option but to supply water once in four days. Only then, the availability and requirement can be met by us till April,” Mr.Chellappa said.

The Corporation will dig new borewells in suburban areas and also identify private wells based on a report from engineers and water experts.

According to the Mayor, 34 wells were already identified in outer areas and officials are speaking to the owners to draw water from the wells.

“At the same time, we will also check the water quality through proper lab tests to find out whether it is fit for drinking,” he added.

A. Mathuram, City Engineer, said right now the total quantity of water supplied was 127 million litres per day (MLD), of which 115 MLD came from the Vaigai and the remaining quantity from combined drinking water schemes.

There are 1,846 Corporation borewells and steps are also being taken to deepen tanks in Vandiyur, Sellur and Madakulam.

Residents can obtain details of drinking water supply timings in their area from the local Corporation office or assistant engineers.

 

TWAD Set to Commence Trial Run of Rs 1,295 Crore Water Scheme by August

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The New Indian Express             03.02.2014 

TWAD Set to Commence Trial Run of Rs 1,295 Crore Water Scheme by August

The sumps nearing completion at one of the water storage units of CWSS project near Muthumandapam in Vellore | S DINESH
The sumps nearing completion at one of the water storage units of CWSS project near Muthumandapam in Vellore | S DINESH

In July, the Tamil Nadu Water Supply and Drainage (TWAD) Board would commence the trial run of the Combined Water Supply Scheme (CWSS) to Vellore Corporation, 11 municipalities, five town panchayats and 944 rural habitations with river Cauvery as the source in Vellore district.

Keeping pace with the stipulated time frame of the project, the officials of the TWAD Board said over 65 per cent of the work worth `707 crore of the `1,295 crore project had been completed as on January 15 this year.

“The agreement period for the completion of the project is January 2015, but we are aiming at providing Cauvery water to people of Vellore district before the Pongal festival next year. The project is progressing smoothly and will be completed well ahead of the agreement period,” said a senior official in the department.

The trial run of the project would begin in the month of August. It would be continued for a minimum of four months, to monitor the functioning of all mechanism, starting from raw water pumping station at the zero point in Thotilpatti near Mettur to the last over head tank and surface level sumps in Arakkonam in Vellore district.

“We will check and monitor the mechanism and infrastructure along the entire stretch of 308 km from the starting point to the end point. We will check for reservoir tightness, hydraulic pressure, seepage in pipelines and storage of water in sumps and overhead tanks during the period. It will take a minimum of three to four months to ensure supply of water without any hindrance to the end user,” the official  noted. The department has also obtained the no objection certificate from the National Highway Authority of India and the Southern Railways, to lay gravity pipelines across the NH roads and below the railway tracks at various spots, in package II and III of the CWSS, said the officials.

Under package II, the work of installing pipelines in the 85 km-stretch, from Kadathur in Dharmapuri to Vaniyambadi in Vellore, the work has been completed in around 60 kilometre of the stretch. In package-I, works such as construction of raw water pumping station, treatment plant and clear water pumping station at Thotilpatti, three booster stations at Komburankadu and Palakkanur in Salem district and Muthampatti in Dharmapuri district were in progress.

Under package-III, which covers a total of 147.30 kilometre from Vaniyambadi to Arakkonam, works such as installing pipelines, constructing surface level sumps, reservoirs and over head tanks were in different stages of completion, said the official. The officials have also communicated the Tamil Nadu Generation and Distribution Corporation (TANGEDCO) to set up four separate feeders under package I of the project, to pump water from the source point to the master balancing reservoirs (MBR) at Kadathur Ridge point.

“We requested the TANGEDCO to install two separate feeders at each point to ensure uninterrupted power supply to the pumping stations. We requested them to install the feeders before the end of July. We have sent an official communication regarding this in the second week of January this year,” the official added further.

 

City’s water supply backbone gets makeover

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The Hindu             03.02.2014 

City’s water supply backbone gets makeover

Vital link:The most recently-built of the city's three pipelines, which collapsed nearly 10 years ago, is being repaired —Photo: K. Pichumani
Vital link:The most recently-built of the city's three pipelines, which collapsed nearly 10 years ago, is being repaired —Photo: K. Pichumani

After several years, a damaged conduit pipeline, the backbone of Chennai’s drinking water distribution network, is being reconstructed.

Three pipelines, ten km long, carry water from the Red Hills reservoir to be treated at Kilpauk Water Works before being distributed to one-third of the city’s population. The pipelines laid at various point of time by Chennai Metrowater are some of the earliest infrastructure used to supply drinking water to the city.

Metrowater officials said the earliest among the three huge conduit lines, constructed with brick masonry by the British in 1914, is still in use. The most recently-built of the pipelines, constructed in 1986, collapsed nearly a decade ago and is currently being repaired. The other two lines continue to be used to transmit up to 270 million litres a day.

In a bid to strengthen the conduit, Metrowater has initiated a Rs. 39.20-crore project to replace the damaged brick masonry structure with a concrete structure. Of the total distance of 10 km, the water agency is carrying out work on a five-km stretch from the intake tower of Red Hills reservoir near Surapet to Rajamangalam as it is free of encroachments.

It is being constructed as a twin channel to regulate water distribution. As the huge pipelines run underground with only its brick arches or inspection chambers visible at some points, they are more prone to encroachments. The water agency plans to intensify patrolling to prevent further encroachments. The work is set to be completed by March next year, said sources in Metrowater.

The Rs. 39.20-cr. project will see brick masonry replaced with concrete.

Last Updated on Monday, 03 February 2014 08:36
 


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