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Water Supply

Fund crunch hits Godavari project

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Deccan Chronicle 17.12.2009

Fund crunch hits Godavari project

December 17th, 2009
By Our Correspondent

Hyderabad, Dec. 16: Close on the heels of the Metro rail project slowly getting into a quagmire, the Godavari drinking water project for supplying water to the city too seems to be following suit. The Water Board had planned to mortgage its lands and obtain loans to fund the project. But, with uncertainty shrouding the unity of the state, officials fear the land prices would go down and the banks may not consider land as collateral for sanctioning loans.

The Telangana factor has hit hard the prospects of the project as neither the JNNURM authorities nor the banks are willing to fund the project in the volatile political scenario.

The phase-I of the project, estimated to cost Rs 3,375 crore, is all set to be delayed. Even the state government is not in a position to finance the project.

Enquiry revealed that works on Godavari Srujala Sravanthi, a dream project of late YSR, have almost come to a halt. The cash-strapped Water Board has written to the state to come to its rescue.

Though the state government allocated Rs 250 crore in its budget for the project, it is yet to release the money. On the other hand, the Greater Hyderabad Municipal Corporation (GHMC) too has not given the Rs 350-crore first instalment for execution of the project as directed by YSR.

The Phase-I of the project requires over Rs 1,100 crore every year. It has to be completed by March 2011 but it looks unlikely with Water Board struggling to raise funds.

As if this was not enough, the Water Board also needs to acquire 1,100 acres of land between Hyderabad and Karimnagar to lay pipelines. A senior official told this correspondent that the Board is now looking for financial support from the Centre. “A request has been made to the Centre to declare it as a national project and extend financial help,” he said.

The Phase-I is aimed at bringing in 175 million gallons a day to meet the drinking water needs of Greater Hyderabad. This will grow ultimately to 31 TMC feet by 2031.

 

‘35 pc of BWSSB water goes unaccounted’

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The New Indian Express 16.12.2009

‘35 pc of BWSSB water goes unaccounted’


BANGALORE: About 35 per cent of the 870 million litres daily (MLD) supplied by BWSSB goes unaccounted, said M N Thippeswamy, former chief engineer, BWSSB.

He was delivering the keynote address at the national conference on urban water management. To check this trend, changing old pipelines which are corroded is a must, he said.

M Kemparamaiah, chief engineer of BWSSB said about 33,000 connections were selected in Vasanthnagar for leakage reduction through rehabilitation of water distribution system.

With minimum night flow test, BWSSB found the leakage level to be 87 litre per connection per hour (l/c/hr) as against a target of 27 l/c/ hr, he said. Kemparamaiah said after attending to the leakages, the quality of water supply improved.

Last Updated on Wednesday, 16 December 2009 10:50
 

BMC to decide on 100 pc water cut

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Hindustan Times 16.12.2009

BMC to decide on 100 pc water cut

The city’s next summer is going to be worse than its last.

Mumbai’s already thinly stretched water supply is about to be stretched even thinner, with water dipping drastically in the Modak Sagar and Upper Vaitarna lakes, which supply water to the island city and the western suburbs.

Officials said there is currently only enough water for the next 200 days, and that May and June will be very difficult to get through. The municipality will propose a once-a-week 100 per cent cut at a meeting on Monday.

The city’s 108 water supply zones will be divided into seven zones (two in the island city, two in the western suburbs, three in the eastern suburbs) and each zone will face a 100 per cent cut.

“If the groups leaders reject the proposal, it will be very difficult for us to provide water,” said a senior official requesting anonymity. The total water stock in the city’s six lakes is also dipping gradually.

As on Tuesday, there was 7.71 lakh million litres of water in all six lakes — last year on the same day, the figure was 10.1 lakh million litres.

“If we don’t save water now, the city will face extreme water shortage in May and June,” a senior civic official added.
Anil Diggikar, additional municipal commissioner, said: “We will discuss the issue in the group leaders meeting on Monday and come up with measures to be taken”. Water in the Bhandup Master Balance Reservoir (MBR), which supplies to the island city and the western suburbs, is also dwindling, leading to a drop in the pressure at which it is supplied.

“The maximum water level in the MBR is 4 metres — these days, it dips below 1.8 metres, reducing the water supply pressure drastically,” said an official from the Hydraulic Department.

The worst hit will be those living on hilly areas, which will consequently get water at the lowest pressure.

Currently, the city is reeling under 15 and 30 per cent water cuts respectively for residential and commercial consumers.

A day after the municipal commissioner said water connections to pre-2000 slums would be regularised, Diggikar said: “We will need the Supreme Court’s permission to supply water there as the proposal to regularise pre-2000 slums is sub-judice.”

Last Updated on Wednesday, 16 December 2009 10:21
 


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