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General Administration

States told to revise water tariffs

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The Hindu              03.09.2013

States told to revise water tariffs

Smriti Kak Ramachandran

Low rates lead to under-recovery of costs: Ministry

Low and infrequently revised water and sanitation tariffs have led to the under-recovery of costs and a widening gap between the cost of production and the tariff charged, the Union Ministry of Urban Development has observed. Concerned by the absence of cost reflective tariffs in cities and the poor management of funds, the Ministry has now asked all States to carry out tariff revisions for water and sanitation services at regular intervals and in a transparent manner.

It has also asked for ensuring a pass through of cost escalation on account of inflation in the tariff on an annual basis.

In an advisory to the States on tariff structure for urban water supply and sewerage services, the Ministry has recommended that tariff for water should not only include cost of operation and maintenance, but should also cover the capital replacement cost. Noting that water and sanitation tariff plans in several cities do not even cover the essential operation and maintenance, the Ministry has said tariff revision not carried out timely has led to a widening gap between the cost of production and the tariff charged.

“The Ministry has notified that desired service level benchmark for cost recovery in water supply services as 100 per cent. A study conducted in 2008-09 revealed that on an average the cost recovery is 67.2 per cent while only 5 cities recovered full operation and maintenance (O&M) cost and 16 urban local bodies could recover less than 65 per cent of their O&M cost,” the Ministry has said.

The concept of levying user charges has been appreciated on the grounds that it helps in maintenance and upgrading the services. “Water is considered to be essential good and provided at very low rates and even free of cost,” the Ministry has put forth.

It has recommended that user charges should be constructed in a way to meet the O&M cost, debt servicing, and depreciation towards the cost of the project. “In addition, they must also generate some surplus to enable building the equity base of urban local bodies, supported, where appropriate with viability gap funding.”

The Ministry has also recommended that where services can be measured and beneficiaries identified, user charges must apply rather than taxes.

“Where beneficiaries are not easily identifiable or benefits not easily measured, the cost of services should be recouped through a surrogate tax on an appropriate base.”

The efforts made to stem non revenue water and cover the costs will help curtail wastage of treated water, the Ministry has said, pointing out that about 30-60 per cent of water supplied gets wasted and 60 per cent of all losses occur because of unmetered or faulty connections.

As for sewerage charges, the Ministry has recommended fixing up sewage tariff as 50-75 per cent of water tariff according to the water use.

 

Get ready to pay for parking

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The Hindu              03.09.2013

Get ready to pay for parking

Staff Reporter

Get ready to pay for parking from next month. Free parking may soon be a luxury, what with the Bruhat Bangalore Mahanagara Palike (BBMP) keen on bringing back paid parking by implementing the new parking policy.

According to BBMP Commissioner M. Lakshminarayan, the new policy, which envisages bringing back paid parking, is pending with the standing committee.

“The government is keen that the parking policy be implemented. But since the term of the standing committees ended in April, the subject is pending. The BBMP council has also not been able to hold a subject meeting to decide on the matter,” he said.

He added that once the elections to the post of Mayor, Deputy Mayor and 12 standing committees are held, the new committee members will decide on the subject and send the same to the council for approval.

‘Elections will be postponed’

However, sources in the BJP, which is the Ruling Party in the BBMP council, told The Hindu that the elections to the standing committees that was scheduled for September 4 will be postponed. The elections to the different panels will now be held between September 15 and 25. “The elections were postponed as the city in-charge and Transport Minister Ramalinga Reddy is out of town. Once he returns, the date for the election to the panels will be decided,” sources added.

 

Water meter scheme put on hold

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The Times of India              02.09.2013

Water meter scheme put on hold

AHMEDABAD: The ambitious decision of the Ahmedabad Municipal Corporation (AMC) to give 'building-use' certificates to only those who have water meters installed in the new premises has been put on hold. The civic body was wide-eyed when firms who were asked to provide tenders for water meter installations presented a budget of Rs 19,000 per connection.

Standing committee chairman Bhupendra Patel said, "We had first announced the new water meter scheme from April 1 onwards. The deadline was extended to June and finally after receiving the offers we have abandoned the idea for now," said Patel. When asked whether the water metering idea has been abandoned completely, Patel said, "No not at all. In fact we are looking for cost effective systems and models of implementation."

A preliminary cost analysis of the metered water supply was done in December last year and estimated to be Rs 12,500 per connection. But escalation of costs and as the work also involved tinkering with the existing distribution system, the cost was estimated to be Rs 17,500 per connection. The AMC is yet to take a call on the agency that would supply 'magnetic water meters' to consumers.

A rough estimate calculated by a Union Ministry of Urban Development concept paper on 24X7 water supply claimed that a household of five people consuming water at the rate of 100 litres per capita a day would use approximately 1.8 lakh litres of water every year. Then the annual range of cost of a 24X7 supply service would range between Rs 1,440 and 2,700. This compares well with the current cost of coping that averages Rs 2,500 for poorer households and Rs 5,500 for middle-class households. The Union ministry claimed that the cost has not been tested in practice. However, a rate of Rs 10 to15 per 1,000 litres was worked out in these circumstances.

 


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