The Hindu 07.02.2017
City to get water from Siruvani soon
TWAD Board, with approval from Kerala, to pump 20-30 million litres of water a day
Tamil Nadu Water Supply and Drainage(TWAD) Board will soon pump
Siruvani water to the city. According to sources, the Board, with
approval from the Kerala Government, will pump 20 – 30 million litres of
water a day to the city.
It will pump the water from dead storage
area on the Siruvani Reservoir’s bed to the fourth in-take valve (the
lowest). From there the water will reach the city through the main
supply line. And from the main storage reservoir in Bharathi Park, the
Corporation will supply the water to the city’s residents.
The
TWAD Board sources say that after it got the green signal, it has
started taking steps to pump the water. It would take a day or two for
the water to reach the Bharathi Park reservoir.
Corporation
sources say that it will use the water to feed the residents in the five
Siruvani-dependent areas – Wards 15, 18, 19, 20 and 21 – who are
hitherto fed with lorries.
Meanwhile, the Corporation is in talks
with owners of private water tankers to increase the water supply.
Sources say that the civic body has at present engaged 12 lorries in the
five wards. This is likely to go up in the coming days.
Alternatively, the Corporation has also planned to erect water tanks on lanes and by-lanes in the five wards.
A
preliminary estimate suggests that the Corporation will have to erect
up to 60 tanks to feed residents on the lanes and by-lanes, where
lorries would not be able to reach them. The tankers will fill water in
the tanks and from the tanks the residents will fetch water.
The
sources say that this will also reduce the time taken by lorries to
supply water and result in increase in number of trips. At present each
lorry does about five trips a day.
The sources add that all this
depends on the tapping of the Siruvani water. If it comes through then
the situation will ease a bit.