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Water Supply

Meenad water scheme to be commissioned next month

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The Hindu         11.01.2011

Meenad water scheme to be commissioned next month

Minister inspects water intake pumping station

The Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA)-aided Rs.295 crore Meenad drinking water scheme of the Kerala Water Authority (KWA) will be commissioned by Chief Minister V.S. Achuthanandan during the first week of February. The scheme will cover 13 grama panchayats and the Paravur municipal area in Kollam district.

As part of a pre-commissioning exercise, Water Resources Minister N.K. Premachandran inspected the water intake pumping station of the scheme on the banks of Kallada River at Tholikode and the water treatment plant at Panamkuttimala on Monday. After the inspection, he told presspersons that the trial run of the scheme was a success.

While transmission pipes had been laid and 14 storage tanks constructed, the supply will initially cover only five grama panchayats — Karavallur, Anchal, Edamulakkal, Ummannur and Elamad. This is because the laying of distribution pipes in the other eight panchayats and Paravur town has not been completed.

“Inefficiency on the part of the contractor who was awarded the pipe laying work is responsible for the delay,” Mr. Premachandran said. Therefore, the eight panchayats and Paravur will be covered by the scheme in phases. The panchayats are Pooyapally, Veliyam, Mayyanad, Nedumpana, Adichanallur, Chirakara, Poothakulam and Chathannur.

More than five lakh persons stand to benefit from the scheme which covers an area of over 319 sq. km. Water is being distributed to beneficiaries at the rate of 100 litres a person living in panchayat areas and 150 litres a person living in Paravur town.

The treatment plant has the capacity to purify and supply 73 million litres of water a day. The water for supply will be pumped to the balancing reservoir situated above the plant by two 275 HP pumps. From there water will reach the entire coverage area by gravitational force, thereby avoiding the use of electricity.

Two 970 HP pumps at the intake station will pump water from Kallada River to the treatment plant situated 120 m above and 1.5 km away from the intake station. The scheme has a transmission pipe network of 80 km and a distribution pipe network of 920 km. For a period of two years from its commissioning, the operation and maintenance of the scheme will remain with the contracting company. Only after that will the scheme come under the full control of the KWA.


  • Project to cost Rs.295 crore
  • Supply to cover 5 grama panchayats initially
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    GHMC wants to control water

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    Deccan Chronicle       10.01.2011

    GHMC wants to control water

    January 10th, 2011

    Jan. 9: City corporators, led by the Mayor, have proposed that the Hyderabad Metropolitan Water Supply and Sewerage Board (HMWS&SB) be merged with the Greater Hyderabad Municipal Corporation (GHMC).

    Their contention is that the lack of coordination bet-ween the two public utilities is causing inconvenience to citizens. They say that because the services provided by HMWS&SB and GHMC are closely related, bringing water supply and sewerage services under the control of the GHMC will considerably improve service delivery to citizens.

    Besides, water supply is not an alien subject to GHMC, because the municipal corporation that was supplying water to surrounding municipalities for years together until the responsibility was shifted to the Water Board a year ago. However, urban development experts, elected representatives including MPs and MLAs from the city, and environmentalists, want a thorough discussion and debate on the proposal. They also want the opinion of experts, policy makers and stakeholders to be taken into consideration before a final decision is made.

    Besides, the merger proposal would throw up possible demands for bringing under a single umbrella other crucial departments like fire services, traffic, public transport, power supply, law and order, schools and colleges, and medical services and the question is whether an agency like the GHMC, which is struggling to fulfil its present duties, will be able to take the additional load of providing more services.

    Urban development expert Mr D.V. Rao of the Centre for Good Governance said water supply services are with municipalities elsewhere in the state, but there are drawbacks to doing the same for Hyderabad. “In Hyderabad, the Water Board was created as a separate entity through an Act of Legislature. The advantage of being an independent identity is getting huge funding from international agencies to execute projects. If the Water Board is merged with the GHMC, international loans and other funding will not be that easy to get as GHMC would already be taking loans for execution of other civic infrastructure projects.”

    He said the government is not in a position to fund either the Water Board or the GHMC with the kind of huge finances the two public utilities require to provide basic civic infrastructure to citizens in new colonies that have mushroomed in surrounding municipalities, leave alone improving the existing but deteriorating facilities in the core city. Mr Rao said though the 74th Constitutional Amendment stipulates that even water supply is part of the duties to be executed by an urban local body, the conditions in Greater Hyderabad are different.

    “May be the state government amends the Water Board Act and makes some of the GHMC corporators and officials members on the Water Board to improve coordination, and policy decisions are taken in consultation with each other,” he added. National Disaster Management Authority vice-chairperson, Mr M. Shashidhar Reddy, said that while lack of coordination is seen among various departments, the most notable mismatch is between the GHMC and the Water Board. “It is a good idea to merge at a time when both agencies blame each other for sewer connections being tapped to storm water network resulting in flooding of roads and streets during the rainy season, and polluting the water bodies too. However, we have to see how feasible the merger is. We should learn from the experiences of other cities like the Mumbai municipal corporation, which also maintains water supply and transport (buses). The fire service is another important subject that should be under the control of the urban local body,” he said.

    BJP state president and Amberpet MLA, Mr Kishen Reddy, says the proposal should be discussed by urban development experts and citizens. “There is no doubt that there is no coordination between the GHMC and Water Board. I am witness to the lack of coordination, a glaring one being Water Board officials coming and cutting open the roads less than a week after the GHMC had re-carpeted it with bitumen. It is the failure of the GHMC that it does not inform the Water Board about its road works, and likewise the Water Board never bothers to inform the GHMC that it will be digging up so and so roads,” Mr Reddy said.

    Eminent environmentalist Mr K. Purushotham Reddy said it is high time that Hyderabad is made into a state on the lines of Delhi. “The population of Greater Hyderabad is nearing the one crore mark and its geographical area is spread over 625 sq. km. If needed, the boundaries can be extended further and the city made into a state. This would allow the state administration to focus better on improvement and development of amenities,” he said.

    Hyderabad MP, Mr Asaduddin Owaisi of MIM said the problem with agencies like the Water Board, GHMC, Central Discom, APTransco, traffic police, APSRTC city unit, and railways is that the duties of each have been earmarked clearly but they are not able to discharge those duties.

     

    City goes dry as drinking water supply schemes get delayed

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    The Hindu      10.01.2011

    City goes dry as drinking water supply schemes get delayed

    Staff Reporter

    Drinking water shortage reported from many parts of the city

    The stalemate regarding the implementation of a few drinking water supply projects for Kochi city and adjoining areas continues even as many parts of the city have gone dry.

    It may take some more time to end the deadlock regarding the Piravam water supply scheme, which is expected to address the drinking water needs of the city. The pipelines for the water supply scheme could not be laid as opposition arose to the cutting open of a busy road in Piravam. A few meetings held earlier had failed to end the impasse. The Kochi corporation, the beneficiary of the scheme, has been persuading the authorities for an early settlement of the issue.

    The water supply scheme, which is being implemented with the support of the Jawaharlal Nehru National Urban Renewal Mission, aims at bringing water from the Muvattupuzha River to the corporation areas, which will help in reducing the dependence on water from the Periyar.

    “The authorities have been asked to study the feasibility of laying the pipelines along an alternative route by avoiding the newly tarred road,” said M. Vijayakumar, Minister for Public Works. The decision to study the feasibility of an alternative route was taken at the last meeting held to end the impasse. A final decision regarding the route would be taken after obtaining the feasibility report, he said.

    As the uncertainty regarding the Piravam project continues, the civic authorities felt that the pumping of drinking water from the Aluva pump house of the Kerala Water Authority should be increased to meet the water demands of Kochi city and the adjoining areas. Drinking water shortage is acute in some parts of the city, including Kuvapadam, Chakkamadam, Aanavathil and Jew Street areas.

    The corporation was supplying drinking water in tanker lorries to areas, from where water shortage was reported, said T.K. Ashraf, chairman, health standing committee of the Kochi corporation.

    The corporation has initiated the paper works for inviting tenders for supplying drinking water in tanker lorries during the next fiscal. The contract for the current fiscal would end in March. The paper works for the next financial year were initiated in advance as notification for the Assembly polls may be issued in March or April. Once the notification is issued, it would not be possible to invite tenders for such schemes and it may affect the supply of drinking water. The proposal inviting tenders would come up for discussion at the next meeting of the corporation council, Mr. Ashraf said.

    Government's support and intervention were required for the completion of the water supply scheme for West Kochi, which was supported by the UK Department for International Development, and the project for giving water to Palluruthy area using financial assistance from HUDCO, he said.


  • Pipelines for Piravam water supply scheme yet to be laid
  • Water supplied in tanker lorries in affected areas
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