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Water Supply

Authorities brace up for daily water supply

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The Hindu  15.12.2010

Authorities brace up for daily water supply

Staff Reporter

Three elevated-level service reservoirs handed over to Public health department for trial run

Civic body plans to add 16 mld to its present capacity of 24 mld

YSR laid stone for the Rs.18.64-crore drinking water scheme


Photo: Srinivas Kommuri

Looking ahead:District Collector Kantilal Dande and Municipal Commissioner S Ravindra Babu inspecting the filtration plant in Ongole on Tuesday.

ONGOLE: The long-cherished dream of daily water supply for citizens is all set to become reality as against once in three days now, with the handing over of three elevated-level service reservoirs(ELSRs) by the Public Health department to the civic authorities for trial run.

“The trial run is on under the areas covered by three ELSRs at Gandhinagar, Sirigiri hill top and Bhagyanagar. Leakages on main lines are plugged to stabilise the water supply system through gravity'', Muncipal Commissioner S Ravindra Babu said.

“The fourth ELSR at Dibbal Road will be handed over by the month-end and another ELSR by March 2011 as part of the civic body's plan to augment the drinking water supply to meet the needs of the people of the town even up to 2021,'' Public Health Executive Engineer A Satyanarayana Rao said.

Prakasam District Collector Kantilal Dande, Special Officer in-charge of Ongole Municipality visited the filtration plant on Tuesday and held a detailed examination of the water supply position with the Municipal commissioner and other officials.

The civic body has programmed to add additional 16 Million litres per day (mld) through the ELSRs to add to its present capacity of 24 mld.

Expected demand

“This will be enough to meet the expected demand even upto 40 MLD by 2021'', Mr Rao said, adding the filtration plants have already been completed.

Pipeline has been laid connecting the new ELSRs to the existing distribution mains except for a few areas where it crosses the road like in Ramnagar and near the RTC bus stand.

''Once hydraulic testing is over, the new water supply system will be connected to the existing distribution network latest by month-end'', he added.

It was late Chief Minister Y S Rajasekhara Reddy who had laid the foundation stone for the Rs.18.64-crore drinking water scheme to enable the municipality supply water daily instead of once-in-three days presently.

The Rs. 18-crore drinking water augmentation scheme was sanctioned by the Centre at the instance of Ongole MP Magunta Srinivasula Reddy.

Last Updated on Wednesday, 15 December 2010 06:58
 

WB aid for cleaning water body

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The Hindu  15.12.2010

WB aid for cleaning water body

T. Lalith Singh


Noor Mohammad Kunta is used by industries in the vicinity for dumping effluents

The tank is said to have considerable metal deposits which flow downstream


HYDERABAD: Noor Mohammad Kunta, the highly polluted water body at Katedan Industrial Area, would be taken up for remediation as part of a pilot project with financial assistance from World Bank.

For the Capacity Building and Industrial Pollution Management Project (CBIPMP), a team from the World Bank had visited the water body on Thursday and the implementing agency, Andhra Pradesh Pollution Control Board (APPCB) is in the process of appointing consultants. The water body which for long was used by the industries in the vicinity for dumping effluents and had environmentalists raising a hue and cry given the high levels of metal presence, has already been provided with a sewerage treatment plant (STP).

The tank is said to have considerable metal deposits which flows downstream. Now, the project aims at remediation on pilot basis with plans to replicate the same with other polluted water bodies later. “We have sought expression of intent from experienced consultants for a design study on remediation to be taken up,” PCB member secretary K. Madhusudana Rao said. Once the list of responses is screened initially and a consultant is approved by the World Bank, a design study could be in place in about three to four months.

For the five-year CBIPMP in the State, the World Bank has approved a total cost of $ 40.69 million.

The APPCB has also sought consulting service for the Kadapa project to assess the level and nature of contamination for groundwater, surface water and soil apart from carrying out detailed investigations and preparation of a technical and engineering design for closure and containment of the site.

Last Updated on Wednesday, 15 December 2010 06:54
 

PMC invites bids for water supply scheme

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The Times of India        14.12.2010

PMC invites bids for water supply scheme

 PUNE: The Pune Municipal Corporation has initiated steps to involve a private consultant/ firm to redesign the city's water supply system.

The civic body on Sunday floated a tender seeking consultants or firms who would do the network analysis, take corrective measures such as leak detection, system rehabilitation and a water audit, flow measurement, systems reengineering and network rehabilitation and suggest cost-effective measures to meet the city's water demand for the next 30 years.

It would address the disparity in water to the city where the central parts get plenty of water while the fringe areas reel under scarcity. The bidders would need to be from the urban water sector with adequate national or international experience in designing water supply.

Puneites receive 314 litre per capita per day (LPCD) drinking water as against the set norms of 150 LPCD. The tender notice states that, "The PMC during 2009-10 consumed 14.64 TMC water i.e a demand of 314 LPCD as against the 150 LPCD of the Central Public Health and Environmental Engineering Organisation (CPHEEO) norms. In spite of high average consumption of water per head, certain areas received very low and inequitable water supply due to design deficiencies in the overall water supply system, especially in the old distribution networks."

"The consultant/firm is expected to prepare a comprehensive detailed project plan (DPR) suggesting interalia system to provide 150 lpcd (domestic consumption) water supply for the city's population," the notice said.

Municipal commissioner Mahesh Zagade's proposal to introduce a metered water supply system for household consumers (domestic supply) is pending before the standing committee. Based on the condition that the cost of service and its recovery should also be equal under the Jawaharlal Nehru National Urban Renewal Mission (JNNURM), the Union government has set the 24-hour water supply norm and also installing meters for consumers in Pune.

The civic administration has repeatedly attempted to introduce the metered water billing system to calculate water tax, but the PMC general body had scrapped it for domestic users from April 1, 2000, and instead billed users on a system based on the Annual Rateable Value (ARV) of their property.

Zagade's proposal has said that water meters should be made compulsory as per the JNNURM reforms. The proposal states that 150 litres of water will be provided per head and a five-member family will be considered as a unit. If a family uses 150 litres water per head (750 litres in total) no extra charges will be imposed and the existing water rates will be charged. Rs 33 will be charged for every additional 1,000 litres.

Earlier, Zagade had tabled a proposal before the standing committee submitted by Tata Consultants on how to address, augment and execute the water supply needs. The firm sought Rs 37 crore as fees. The standing committee members opposed the proposal saying that the fees were excessive and sent it back to the civic administration.

 


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