Fingers Crossed as BWSSB Tankers Set to Supply Water

Tuesday, 11 February 2014 07:05 administrator
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The New Indian Express            11.02.2014

Fingers Crossed as BWSSB Tankers Set to Supply Water

People rush to collect water from a tanker.
People rush to collect water from a tanker.

After first promising that there would be no water shortage during summer, including an uninterrupted supply of 1,300 million litres per day, Bangalore Water Supply and Sewerage Board (BWSSB) is now set to supply water in tankers at `360 per load (6,000 litres).

While many areas in the city depend on ‘Cauvery water’, when this or their regular water sources, whatever they may be, prove  insufficient, people generally turn to private parties that supply water through tankers.

However, an important question is whether BWSSB’s water tankers are sufficient to quench the city’s thirst.

“Thirty tankers are nothing. Even if they have 100 tankers, it won’t be enough,” says Kumar K, proprietor of Kaveri Water Supply with its office in Vasanth Nagar. With three tankers, the firm supplies water at `400 per load.

He also adds that while there’s some competition among private water suppliers, they do not consider a similar service by the BWSSB as a threat.

“We have our regulars (customers) - especially apartment complexes and commercial establishments like hotels,” he says.

Vishwas M, who owns Banashankari Water, which supplies 6,500 litres at `600 adds that their prompt service too works to private businesses’ advantage.

“People know that it’s not easy to get BWSSB tankers to come home. From what I’ve seen, you need someone with influence to ask them if you need them to arrive on the same day, even,” Vishwas adds.

According to him, promises like these are more easily made than implemented. “We know how hard it is to refill and cover long distances. Plus, when everyone wants water in the summer, even our sources are drying up, and when water’s aplenty during the rains, there’s little demand for it.”

Gururaj, an employee at J P Nagar-based Revathi Water Supply which supplies a load at `500, thinks that this is a much needed change. “This business is a hard one to survive in. We had six tankers earlier. Last year, we cut down to three, and now there’s talk of closing down altogether. The problem is that we don’t have the resources that the government has - tankers, water sources, power supply among them. And after all, water is a basic amenity, so shouldn’t they take care of it?” Nevertheless, he too feels that the number of tankers that provide this facility should go up.

A source within the BWSSB claims that the Board’s intention is merely to regulate the rates quoted by private tankers.

“The service we’re providing is available throughout the year, but why should people pay exorbitant rates unnecessarily. We hope if we announce that we supply at `360, they too will bring down their rates,” the official says.