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Road Development

Rs 1.7 crore okayed for road renovation

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The New Indian Express               21.06.2013

Rs 1.7 crore okayed for road renovation

Considering the dilapidated condition of city roads, Rs 1.70 crore has been sanctioned for the renovation of 18 roads in the district, Hibi Eden MLA has said.

Roads under the Kochi Corporation along with Cheranellore panchayat will get a facelift from flood relief funds. Rs 12 lakh each has been earmarked for the development of Puthiya Road and Vaduthala Janakeeya Road and Mercy line at the 34th division.

The MLA said Rs 10 lakh each was set aside for the renovation of Choollakkaparambu Road, St Jacob Road in Cheranalloor panchayat, Chakyath Road, Poozhithura Road and the road leading from the telephone exchange to Kollarickal junction. `14 lakh has also been sanctioned for laying of slabs to cover the canal in Thanikkal junction.

He said `8 lakh has been set aside for the renovation of the Mathirappally Road, `2 lakh for Thaikavu Sub-road, `6 lakh for St George Chapel line, `9 lakh for Church Cross Road and `14 lakh for Chandumaster Road. Funds will be allotted for the re-construction of Yeshoram Colony Road.

`7 lakh will be sanctioned for Revathy Road, `5 lakh for Vadakkepaalam Sub-road and `10.5 lakh for Pallithodu railway link Road.

 

Streetlights to be metered

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The Hindu              18.06.2013

Streetlights to be metered

Kaavya Pradeep Kumar

The Corporation is taking steps to get meters and light sensors installed by the Kerala State Electricity Board on all 84,000 streetlight posts in the city.

This will pave way for the installation of LED lights on the posts. (LED or light-emitting diode is a semiconductor diode which glows when a voltage is applied). The light-detecting sensors can turn on or off the lamps.

Defunct lights billed

The installation of meters would quantify the use of power for streetlights. The civic body had been paying huge sums as power bills as even defunct lights are billed by KSEB.

The Corporation had paid Rs.1.1 crore to the KSEB for the installation of meters. The formalities would take three months and tenders could be invited only after the government’s technical sanction, sources said. The Corporation had paid the fee to install meters in four KSEB sections two years ago. Work in these sections would start shortly, Corporation sources said. After metering, the operation and maintenance of the lights would be done by the Corporation.

High-mast lamps in the city had already been metered. These lamps would be supplemented with timer-control switches so that some bulbs could be turned off after peak hours, sources said.

Corporation works standing committee chairperson V.S. Padmakumar told The Hindu that power bills were going up every year and power-saving options had to be explored.

Last Updated on Tuesday, 18 June 2013 06:01
 

Hubli-Dharwad may get good streetlights

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The Times of India                17.06.2013

Hubli-Dharwad may get good streetlights

HUBLI: The Hubli-Dharwad Municipal Corporation (HDMC) is finding out ways and means to light up the streets and at the same time beat the rising cost of electricity bills and save energy. Currently HDMC is in talks with a government of India undertaking on the streetlight project. If all goes well, the twin cities will glow with good streetlights.

En ergy Efficiency Service Limited (EESL) has approached HDMC to save the civic body's annual expenditure on streetlights and to maintain the streetlights for six years. Speaking to TOI, Satish Phatke, executive engineer, electricity department, HDMC, sai d that as per the Energy Conservative Act 2001, the civic body has to adopt power-saving system or has to generate its own power.

''Recently we had talks with the assistant general manager of EESL company. It will help us to adopt an energy-efficiency project in the twin cities. The talks are going on at the highest level. Subsequenlty, we will finalize the terms with the company,'' he said.

The next step after high-level talks will be an energy audit. Later, the company will prepare a detailed project report on how to save energy. Then the maintenance of streetlights will be given to it, said Phatke. After the implementation of the project, the savings will be shared among the government, EESL and HDMC in a tripartite agreement, he added.

HDMC pays Rs 7.5 crore annually in electricity bills to Hescom for streetlights. Once the project is finalized, EESL will ensure that about 40% energ y is saved, which works out to about Rs 3 crore, and take over the maintenance of streetlights. Maintenance of lights is poor in some streets. This problem will end if maintenance is taken over by this company.

Mohan Asundi, former corporator, said that before signing the agreement, HDMC should look into the all the aspects like checking the track record of the company it intends to outsource the work. If revenue is saved, it will be good for the development of the twin cities.

The money saved can be utilized for other developmental works like roads, he said. 

 


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