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KWA tests 'smart technology'

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The New Indian Express              22.05.2013

KWA tests 'smart technology'

On Tuesday, the Kerala Water Authority (KWA) literally set the ball rolling in the capital as part of vetting a ‘smart’ technology for detecting leaks in water mains.

KWA engineers on Tuesday afternoon released the ‘SmartBall’, a small spherical device fitted with a sensor, through an air valve on Pipeline Road, Ambalamukku, and retrieved it successfully from the Kowdiar end. The ball, smaller than a regular cricket ball but covered with permeable foam, is an acoustic leak-detection device capable of spotting even small leakages in pipelines.

Developed by a Canadian company, the SmartBall is perhaps the only technology that can locate even small leaks which are otherwise undetectable using conventional ‘surface’ technologies, KWA Managing Director Ashok Kumar Singh said.

’The technologies available are purely subjective and require a high-level of expertise. We have not purchased the ball yet, but testing it,’’ he said. The modus operandi is quite simple. The ball is dropped into the pipeline and is carried along with the flow. The sound inside the pipeline is recorded by the sensor and variations - a leak will have a hissing sound, for instance - are also picked up.

 ’It’s like having a person inside the pipeline itself examining it for leaks. Since the ball is GPS-enabled, we will be able to pinpoint the location of the leak once the ball is retrieved,’’ a senior KWA official said.

But this technique is not without its drawbacks when used in complicated, inter-connected water supply networks such as the one in Thiruvananthapuram. The foam covering on the ball is one way of tackling it, say KWA officials.

For example, if the ball is released into a 500-mm pipeline, the coating can be thickened to prevent it from being drawn into a smaller pipeline that opens into the bigger one.

The KWA is toying with smart leak-detection technologies at a time when the water supply utility has been plagued by leaks on the old pipelines criss-crossing the city.

In one instance, multiple leaks on the main 1,200-mm pipeline had even prompted the government to set up a committee to investigate.

‘SmartBall’

KWA is testing ‘SmartBall’, a spherical acoustic-based leak detecting device that is released into water mains. Smaller than a cricket ball, the SmartBall is GPS-enabled.

 

Water supply: Illegal connections cut

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The New Indian Express              22.05.2013

Water supply: Illegal connections cut

A special squad and the Blue Brigade of the Kerala Water Authority (KWA) identified numerous illegal connections on the newly-laid JICA pipeline at Pothencode, Chenkottukonam and Sasthavattam areas coming under the Thiruvananthapuram Public Health Division of the KWA.

 The water utility has suspended the plumbing licence of Sivasakthi Engineering Works which, allegedly, arranged the illegal connections. Raids at Chenkottukonam and Sasthavattam areas revealed 12 illegal connections on the JICA pipeline. KWA officials have disconnected the illegal lines.

 An investigation revealed that one Sreekumaran Nair, who has a plumbing licence in the name of Sivasakthi Engineering Works, had arranged the connections after taking huge sums from individuals, the KWA said in a statement. The licence stands suspended until further notice, KWA officials said. The KWA has also asked consumers in the region who have taken new connections from the said plumber to contact the Assistant Executive Engineer, Water Works North Sub-Division, to ascertain whether their connections are legal or not.

 The officer can be contacted on 8547638186.

 The KWA had tightened monitoring of its facilities following reports that water theft and illegal connections were on the rise in the capital city. In fact, the special squad was formed to detect misuse and theft of water in view of the drought situation.

 The raids were led by Assistant Executive Engineer Chandrakumar and overseers Jose Paul, Manikantan and Sajeev. The police also accompanied the KWA team.

 

Merger of two municipalities in GVMC likely

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The Hindu              22.05.2013

Merger of two municipalities in GVMC likely

Staff Reporter

Official notification is expected soon

The process of merging Bhimunipatnam and Anakapalle municipalities and some other villages with the GVMC is likely to gather momentum paving the way for finally effecting the merger, it is reliably learnt.

An official notification is expected soon with the government inviting objections after which the merger will be effected, it is learnt. Apart from Bhimunipatnam, the State’s oldest municipality, and Anakapalle, five villages in Anakapalle mandal and four in Bhimili have been proposed for inclusion in the GVMC.Though the proposal for merger has been there for a long, it has gained momentum of late with the Minister for Investment and Infrastructure Ganta Srinivasa Rao specifically backing it. Union Minister of State for Commerce and Industry D. Purandeswari is in favour of retaining the identity of the historically important Bhimunipatnam.

Issue of official notification on it is expected soon.

 


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