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Scarcity may cause water pollution

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Deccan Chronicle 19.02.2010

Scarcity may cause water pollution

February 19th, 2010
By DC Correspondent , DC Correspondent

February 18: The situation is bleak as far as the people are concerned. Not only are they are having to do without power for most of the day, but water too is in short supply, throwing up the risk of contamination and diseases in many parts of the city.

With the storage level in the Thippagondanahalli reservoir falling by the day, the northern and western parts of Bengaluru are already facing a water shortage, although summer has still not fully set in. The reservoir which can hold up to 74 ft of water, filled up only to 31 ft in November 2009 due to poor rainfall. Its level now stands at 22 ft, when it was 35 ft this time last year.

It is feared that the erratic power could hit the pumping stations which are 120 km away from the city, affecting the city’s water supply even more. Not only could this lead to more demand for water tankers, but also tell on people’s pockets as they come for not less than Rs 700 to Rs 800 a load.

“Scarcity of water leads to storage of water for longer periods, which can lead to its contamination and diseases like gastroenteritis, cholera, typhoid and hepatitis,” says BBMP deputy health officer, in charge of communicable diseases Dr Manoranjan Hegde. The city is no stranger to such outbreaks, particularly during summer. The Isolation Hospital says there were 3,145 cases of gastroenteritis and 34 of cholera in the city last year and at least eight deaths. While BBMP places the figures much lower, claiming the city had 1,844 cases of gastroenteritis and 16 of cholera in 2009, and denies there have been any deaths due to cholera in the last two years, it still prefers not to take any chances.

BBMP chief health officer Dr L. T. Gayathri has directed a team to visit hotels and cafeterias to check them for hygiene and close them down if they don’t measure up to standards. The civic agency is insisting that hotels serve boiled water to customers and is also testing water in taps and mini overhead tanks to see that it is free of contamination. Halogen tablets are being distributed to all households for use in their drinking water.

As an added precaution the BBMP has issued a circular to health officers to evict roadside vendors selling cut fruit. Tanker water is also being checked to ensure that it is fit for drinking. Ravi Suriya, a water tanker contractor, however, says only treated borewell water is supplied in ESI coated tanks to homes and hotels around the city. BWSSB chief executive engineer T. Venkataraju says the board is doing its best to make sure that the city doesn’t go without water this summer. “We have appealed to KPTCL and Bescom to make sure that pumping stations are not hampered by erratic power supply. Also, we have 40 tankers of our own to supply water during a crisis,” he adds.

 

City swelters: 10º hotter without trees

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Deccan Chronicle 18.02.2010

City swelters: 10º hotter without trees

February 18th, 2010
By DC Correspondent , DC Correspondent

Feb. 17: With the ‘Garden City’ becoming an IT hub, tree-lined avenues have begun to give way to highways and flyovers. But it does not bode well for the pleasant climes Bengaluru is known for, according to a survey conducted by Ashoka Trust for Research in Ecology and the Environment (ATREE). The findings of the ‘Street tree of Bengaluru: A critical ecological and environmental resource’ survey conducted between July and August in six places including Hennur Junction on Outer Ring Road, Magadi Road and Mekhri Circle has shown that stretches of roads where trees have been cut off are 10 degree Celsius hotter than those lined with trees.

That is not all. These roads are more polluted, with their levels higher than national standards and have registered a steep rise in the presence of suspended particulate matter (SPM). On Sarjapur Road, where trees were felled recently to widen roads, the level of sulphur dioxide was 200 per cent higher than the average standard.

Roads with trees were found to be 20 per cent more humid, making it easier to tolerate the heat. “The survey proves that trees reduce temperature, increase humidity, absorb sulphur dioxide and remove suspended particulate matter. This survey was, however, conducted in monsoon. We will be doing a survey again during the peak of summer,” said Harini Nagendra, urban ecology coordinator of ATREE, talking at a session held at IISc on Tuesday.

“The city is transitioning to an urban structure dominated by roads. With no policy in place on tree planting, there is no clear direction on what kind of trees Bengaluru actually needs. The trees that are being planted by BBMP on the streets are short and will change the look of Bengaluru’s landscape for the worse over the next 15 years. Instead, BBMP can plant tamarind and mango trees, which will also yield a certain amount of revenue for the agency,” Harini added.

 

Environmentalists oppose rapid urbanisation in Kodagu

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The Hindu 13.02.2010

Environmentalists oppose rapid urbanisation in Kodagu

Staff Correspondent

‘Restrictions should be imposed on conversion of land for commercial use’

 


‘Take steps to check influx into Kodagu’

District administration urged to put a cap on granting licence to resorts


Madikeri: Rapid urbanisation in Kodagu with conversion of agricultural land for commercial purposes such as resorts should be stopped immediately and steps taken to check influx into the district, Col. C.P. Muthanna, former president of the Coorg Wildlife Society, said here on Wednesday.

The State Government should impose restrictions on conversion of agricultural land for commercial purposes such as resorts and residential layouts, Col. Muthanna, who heads the Environment and Health Foundation, a non-governmental organisation, told presspersons.

Ravi Chengappa, convenor of Cauvery Sene, was present.

Land in and around important towns in the district, including paddy fields and coffee plantations, was being bought by outsiders to develop residential layouts and build hotels and resorts in an unscientific manner, Col. Muthanna said.

Col. Muthanna appealed to social organisations involving Kodavas, Kodagu Gowdas and other principal inhabitants of Kodagu to discuss the issue and take it up with the elected representatives and the State Government. There were restrictions on outsiders to buy land in Uttaranchal, Jammu and Kashmir and North-Eastern States. Such restrictions should be introduced in Kodagu also.

Stating that Kodagu’s landscape should never change for the worst, Col. Muthanna urged the district administration to take steps to regulate the unplanned growth of towns in the district, particularly, Madikeri, Virajpet and Gonicoppa.

The district administration should put a cap on granting licence to resorts or expansion of the existing ones at least for the next five years. The same rule should apply to home stay facilities that had mushroomed in the district in the garb of tourism development, Col. Muthanna said.

There was a need for the people of villages in the district to resist construction of resorts. They should pressure gram panchayats not to grant no objection certificates, Col. Muthanna said.

It was important for the elected representatives to fight for reservations to principal inhabitants of Kodagu to contest elections to local bodies, he said. Mr. Chengappa said that the environmentalists would initiate legal action if sand mining, extraction of semi-precious stones, illegal felling of trees in the forests and rapid urbanisation continued in the district. The struggle of environmentalists in Kodagu was not supported by the elected representatives, he added.

Last Updated on Saturday, 13 February 2010 03:34
 


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