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Public Health / Sanitation

Supply essential commodities, officials told

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The Hindu 01.04.2010

Supply essential commodities, officials told

Special Correspondent

Rosaiah reviews situation in the old city

 


State is determined to bring back normality in the affected areas: Home Minister

Additional forces from districts requisitioned to monitor the situation


HYDERABAD: Chief Minister K. Rosaiah has instructed officials to ensure supply of essential commodities besides water, milk and medicines in the curfew-bound areas.

He directed Collector Naveen Mittal to visit the affected areas along with a team of officials of the Greater Hyderabad Municipal Corporation, Metro Water Supply Board, Rythu Bazaar to assess the situation and ensure supply of essential commodities.

He was reviewing the law and order situation in the old city, particularly curfew-bound areas under the jurisdiction of 25 police stations with Home Minister P. Sabitha Indra Reddy, Information and Public Relations Minister J. Geeta Reddy, Health Minister D. Nagender and BC Welfare Minister Mukesh Goud, DGP R.R. Girish Kumar and other officials on Wednesday.

Briefing reporters later, Home Minister Sabitha Reddy said that the government was determined to bring back normality and restore peace in the affected areas. Asked when the curfew would be relaxed, she said a decision would be taken based on prevailing situation in the affected areas.

Besides 21 companies of police, additional forces from districts were also requisitioned to monitor the situation. Meanwhile investigation was on to track those behind the communal clashes. The Chief Minister gave instructions to take stern action against those indulging and instigating riots.

Replying to a question, the Home Minister said a Special Investigation Team was probing into the incidents and already 183 persons were arrested so far. She said permission was routinely given for Tuesday's Hanuman Jayanthi rally in Musheerabad much before the break-out of communal flare-up in the old city.

Last Updated on Thursday, 01 April 2010 06:26
 

GHMC mops up old city, finally

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The Hindu 01.04.2010

GHMC mops up old city, finally

Special Correspondent

Religious flags, buntings that caused all the trouble in the last three days removed

 


Garbage had piled up in dumper bins for the last three days

64 open tippers operated to remove the municipal waste


– Photo: AFP

At work: Enforcement cell workers remove religious flags in the old city on Wednesday

HYDERABAD: The GHMC got its act right on Wednesday. It not only began to lift garbage in the old city taking curfew passes for transport vehicles but also began to remove religious flags and buntings that caused all the trouble in the last three days from several places.

Two enforcement vehicles in each of the 18 municipal circles have been positioned at the disposal of the Deputy Commissioners concerned to pick up flags and buntings.

In the trouble-torn old city alone as many as 12 vehicles were pressed into service from among the 22 being used exclusively for the purpose.

Incidentally, the action follows criticism from various sections about the alleged inaction by the municipal corporation in promptly removing the flags and buntings, religious or political in recent times.

Today was also the day when lifting of garbage was taken up in the old city.

Curfew passes

Curfew passes were taken for vehicles and 150 drivers, most of whom reside in the trouble torn areas, to lift garbage from different points. About 64 of total 85 open tippers were operated today to remove the municipal waste, said Additional Commissioner (Health & Sanitation) S.K. Aleem Basha.

The garbage was piled up in dumper bins for the last three days as the transport vehicles were unable to move because of the violent incidents since Sunday.

About 558 dumper bin points were touched by the trucks including those in the old city and in Secunderabad.

Of the 3,800 metric tonnes of garbage generated daily in the capital city about 1,200 metric tonnes of it is generated from the old city.

Meanwhile, solid waste management and transport wing's superintendent engineer has invited fresh tenders from experienced transport contractors for loading, transporting and unloading garbage from localities of Uppal, Malkajgiri, L.B.Nagar, Kukatpally and Ramachandrapuram circles to the Jawaharnagar dumping yard for a period of one year. Twenty five vehicles including tippers and excavators-cum-loads are being requisitioned on the hire basis and with contracts to be finalised by next week.

Last Updated on Thursday, 01 April 2010 06:19
 

Urine-processing technologies yield rich cash flow potential

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Business Standard 30.03.2010

Urine-processing technologies yield rich cash flow potential

Kalpana Jain / New Delhi March 30, 2010, 0:59 IST

The stink is out of urine, literally and metaphorically, with a growing number of researchers spotting commercial and ecological value in a liquid most people consider waste.

The Indian Institute of Technology (IIT) Delhi, for instance, is working to harvest this human waste and convert it into fertiliser. The Delhi government is willing to consider a revenue-share commercial venture selling the phosphates and nitrates in urine.

On the outskirts of Delhi, a little-known non-government organisation, Fountain for Development Research and Action, is laying the ground for the first urine bank. It has diverted urine from two schools, where it has installed odour-free urinals, into a tank and transferred the run-off to a village nearby for use as fertiliser.

Director Madhab Nayak says the foundation is working towards making farmers aware of its potential as replacement for expensive urea.

“There is no such thing as waste,” says Vijayaraghavan M Chariar, assistant professor at the Centre for Rural Development and Technology at IIT. “Urine consists of a lot of inorganic salts, which produce gases only when mixed with water. It is, in fact, pure fertiliser,” he added.

IIT has come up with a cheap, odour-free, urinal which it has successfully tested on campus. The odour-free urinal combines technology with simple science to translate into a significant water-saving initiative (urine smells only when mixed with water, which this technology eliminates).

Urine is collected through a tank placed underground, harvested and used as liquid fertiliser two to three metres below the ground on a five-acre field on campus, said Chariar, who can talk animatedly about this human waste and how its poor treatment alone has led to sanitation problems.

The public urinal at IIT uses a simple technology, called Zerodor, developed by Chariar, that fits into the waste coupler in the pan and diverts the urine through a drain where it is collected and harvested. The idea is not to allow it to mix with water at any stage.

Chariar has already transferred this technology to Good Yield Environmental Technologies, a Kolkata firm, and filed for a patent. Chariar claims that Zerodor is a low cost product and would need replacement in only about two years.

Meanwhile, the Delhi government, which has already installed 200 such odourless urinals in different parts of the city, uses a different and perhaps more expensive technology. Amiya Chandra, deputy commissioner of the city’s municipal corporation, says, “Other than problems of vandalism, these urinals are working perfectly.”

In preparation for the Commonwealth Games, the Delhi government is planning to install 1,000 such urinals at a nominal cost of Rs 3 lakh.

Chariar is already working on the second phase of his project, which was initiated by Unicef and Stockholm Environment Institute, for setting up a small reactor to extract nitrates and phosphates from urine. “This could become a micro-enterprise from the urinal,” says Chariar.

The Delhi government is also looking at installing Chariar’s technology at a few parks in the city, while harvesting urine in those places.

Chariar has even designed similar urinals for women. “We have filed for trademark registration and we are in discussion with companies for marketing it,” he says. With a little more investment, he says, a hydrophobic coating on pans could make it water resistant and completely drain the urine, leaving no room for any oxidisation, which can also cause odour.

In the developed world, communities have been quick to realise the huge economic potential of urine. “Communities in Germany are exporting urine to neighbouring countriesthat are using it on their farms, says Chariar, explaining how it could be diverted for use as a nutrient by a simple plumbing.

The urine tank could deliver the liquid nutrient directly to plants about two to three metres below the soil, he says.

The Centre for Banana Research in Trichy is already using it for banana plantations and the University of agriculture Sciences, Bangalore, too is looking at its varied uses.

Last Updated on Tuesday, 30 March 2010 11:40
 


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