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Water Supply

Water level in TB dam at record low

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Deccan Chronicle               23.05.2013

Water level in TB dam at record low


Koppal: A drinking water crisis seems imminent in Bellary, Koppal and Hospet as water in Tungabhadra (TB) dam has reached the dead storage level as against its capacity of 133 TMC feet. 

Hospet will face an acute shortage of drinking water if there are no rains in the region before the second week of June. Official sources said the dam had 1.076 TMC feet of water on Wednesday against 1.084 TMC feet on the corresponding day last year.

 With no rain in the catchment areas, the inflow into the dam has been reduced to a trickle, leaving the officials concerned in a quandary as they have to release some water into irrigation canals in Koppal, Raichur, Bellary and three districts of Andhra Pradesh.

Farmers have expressed resentment over the fact that officials are ensuring continuous flow to the neighbouring state.

To add to the woes of officials, the storage capacity has dipped to 100 TMC feet due to accumulation of 33 TMC feet of silt in the dam.  Owing to the silt, an additional 33 TMC feet of water has been flowing to Andhra Pradesh as there are no balancing reservoirs to use this water. 

Though the previous BJP government had announced steps for removal of silt, it did not allocate funds for this purpose.

 

Meet held on water project

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The Hindu                23.05.2013

Meet held on water project

Staff Reporter

Andhra Pradesh Municipal Development Project (APMDP) Director K. Bhaskar held a meeting on Wednesday with World Bank representatives Raghu Kesavan, I.U.B. Reddy and D.M. Mohan on the WB-funded comprehensive drinking water project at Guntur Municipal Corporation (GMC) office.

GMC Superintending Engineer P. Adiseshu and In-Charge Executive Engineer R. Nagesh Babu gave a power-point presentation on the status of the project to WB executives. Earlier in the morning, the GMC officials and WB officials inspected the intake well point at Prakasam barrage.

 

KWA scouting for new sources of water

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The Hindu                23.05.2013

KWA scouting for new sources of water

Dennis Marcus Mathew

Continuing drought situation in the capital city.

A continuing drought, rain gods who seem to be on a long holiday, and fast depleting water levels in the Peppara reservoir have prompted the Kerala Water Authority (KWA) to start scouting for new water sources to meet the capital city’s requirements.

From the water level of 95.7 metres in June 2012, which itself was an all-time seasonal low, against the total capacity of 104.5 m, the levels in Peppara plummeted to 92.7 m as on Tuesday. Combined with the water in the Aruvikkara reservoir, this is likely to suffice for a supply of about 25 days. Though the KWA believes, or rather, hopes, that it could rain in between and save the day for them, Managing Director Ashok Kumar Singh has already sent his men out to look for new and alternative sources of water.

While one idea the KWA is toying with is the installation of hand pumps or bore wells in residential areas, after one residents’ association came up with the idea of having one such pump or well for every 10 houses. Another option is to check out how the Vamanapuram river and other waterbodies in that region can be used to tackle emergency situations in Thiruvananthapuram.

While this does not mean that the long-pending Vamanapuram Irrigation Project might get a fresh lease of life, the possibilities of having a check dam constructed to draw water from the river are being examined.

“As of now, the river is underutilised with water being taken only for the Varkala and Attingal water supply schemes. We are conducting studies to see how the river can be used in emergency situations for requirements of the capital city,” Mr. Singh said.

Meanwhile, procedures to hand over contracts to set up seven desalination/reverse osmosis plants on the Thiruvananthapuram coast are in the final stage.

The sites identified for the plants are Veli, Pozhiyoor, the Muthalapozhi Harbour site, Vettukad, Poovar, Anchuthengu, and Puthiyathura. The plants, according to Mr. Singh, could become functional in two to three months once the contracts were awarded. These could solve the water crisis along the coastline to some extent.

 


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