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Water Supply

Water supply may be affected today too

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The Hindu             31.07.2013 

Water supply may be affected today too

C.K. Suryanarayana

Water supply was affected in some areas in the city on Tuesday as the motor feeder of the pump in Cauvery 3rd stage pump house at Tatguni was damaged. Areas where water supply was hit included Yeshwanthpur, Malleswaram, Mathikere, Gokul Extension, Muthyalanagara, R.T. Nagar, Sanjaynagar, Sadashivnagar, Palace Guttahalli, Machalibetta, Fraser Town, Pillanna Gardens, Banappa Park, Shivajinagar, Chikkalalbagh and Sampangiramnagar. Residents of these areas will be inconvenienced on Wednesday too till the repairs are completed.

 

No water supply today

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The Hindu             30.07.2013 

No water supply today

Due to emergency repair works on the pipe supplying water to the city from Thumbe vented dam, the water supply in the city will be halted for 24 hours from 6 a.m. on Tuesday. According to a Mangalore City Corporation release, water supply at Bendoor, Car Street, Kudroli, Ladyhill, Panambur, Surathkal and nearby areas will be affected.

Paddy cultivation target

With copious rainfall in the district, the district administration has said 33,500 hectares of land, producing around 92,125 tonnes of rice, will be cultivated in the district. Of the target, 27,008 hectares had already started cultivation as on Sunday. This is up from 23,513 hectares cultivated in the same period last year. The taluk-wise break up for target and cultivation achieved is as follows: Mangalore 11800 hectares (9367 hectares) Sullia 500 ha (489ha), Bantwal 9,500ha (7,420ha), Belthangady 8,500ha (6,932ha), and, Puttur 3,200ha (2,800ha), a release said. Already 9,463 tonnes of fertilizers and 459.50 quintals of seed had been distributed to 1,274 farmers, while 2,600 acres had been covered under the government’s Bhoochetana (improving health of soil) scheme.

Backyard gardening

The Horticulture Department and Siri Horticulture Association invite applications from individuals or private companies interested in setting up a garden in their backyards. The association will help out in setting up of the garden or terrace garden, while also undertaking works such as landscaping, grass cutting, among others. The works undertaken will be billed. Call 9845523944 for details.

AAP team selected

Robert Rosario has been elected the district convenor of the newly-formed Aam Aadmi Party in the city. The 15-member team, according to a release, includes, Dharmendra K. (Deputy Convenor), Roshan Ullal (Secretary), Ajay Kumar (Deputy Secretary), and Rohan Shiri (Treasurer).

 

Water project likely to be completed by January-end

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The Hindu              24.07.2013 

Water project likely to be completed by January-end

Staff Correspondent

Scheme was originally scheduled to be completed by August this year

The work on the second stage of a project to supply drinking water to Davangere has been going on at a brisk pace and is likely to be over by January-end, 2014.

Once the project gets completed, drinking water can be supplied every day to the entire city. At present, it is being supplied at once in six or eight days.

Keeping in mind the expected demand for water by 2026, the city corporation, through the North Karnataka Urban Sector Investment Programme (NKUSIP), had taken up the second stage of the water supply project at a cost of Rs. 25 crore. It was planned to lift 40 million litres a day (MLD) water from Tungabhadra river near Rajanahalli, and bring it from there to Doddabathi water treatment plant at Bathi. From the Bathi plant, 20 MLD water would be sent to Kunduwada lake, where a water treatment plant is existing. Whenever needed, water from the lake would be treated and supplied to people here. If the Kunduwada lake gets filled up, water requirement of Davangere could be met for two months.

Meanwhile, 20 MLD water retained at Bathi plant would be treated and sent to Davangere, using gravitational force.

The city corporation had taken a loan from the Asian Development Bank for the project. While the loan covered 50 per cent of the cost, the State government had agreed to bear 40 per cent and the remaining 10 per cent of the cost had to be borne by the city corporation.

A Malaysian agency had been given the contract to complete the work.

Pipeline

S.D. Vishwanath, Assistant Executive Engineer, NKUSIP, told The Hindu on Tuesday that a 700-mm diameter (ductile iron pipe) pipeline was being laid from Rajanahalli jack well to Doodabathi, covering a distance of 13 km, to bring 40 MLD water from Tungabhadra River to Bathi water treatment plant.

He said that a 15-lakh litre capacity underground water tank was being constructed at Bathi plant to store the treated water. According to Mr. Vishwanath, the total requirement of water in Davangere by 2026 would be about 100 MLD. At present, the city corporation was providing about 50 MLD water. The project had been originally slated for completion by August-end this year, but owing to heavy rain in the last one and a half months and delay in the procurement of materials, the project might get delayed by four to five months. However, the project would be completed by January-end. Already, 97 per cent of the work on laying the pipeline had been completed. A bridge across Solekerehalla, near Haraganahalli, had to be constructed. Two pump sets of 500 HP and two of 1,000 HP had already been procured. Additional power of 500 KVA had been secured, and efforts were on to get another 1,500 KVA. Once the project got completed, water scarcity problem of Davangere would be completely resolved, he said.

 


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