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Water Supply

GVMC meet focuses on pipeline from Yeleru

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The Hindu      19.05.2010

GVMC meet focuses on pipeline from Yeleru

Staff Reporter

Opposition flays ‘delayed action' to solve water problem


Detailed project reports to be placed before Mayor, floor leaders

BOT basis not proper for the pipeline, says Commissioner


VISAKHAPATNAM: Even as the Opposition flayed the ‘delayed action' of the municipal corporation in meeting the drinking water scarcity in the summer, the special meeting on water supply on Tuesday decided to press with proposals for a pipeline from Yeleru canal to meet the growing needs of the city.

Municipal Commissioner V.N. Vishnu saw laying the pipeline from Yeleru, creating more storage reservoirs and using the Polavaram left main canal by lifting water as options. Phase II of the Jawaharlal Nehru National Urban Renewal Mission would give priority to drinking water, underground drainage and roads. The State Government also favoured laying a pipeline as about 150 mgd of water is required for about 25 lakh population in the future..

Detailed project reports (DPR) would be prepared and placed before the Mayor and floor leaders. For the 153-km Yeleru pipeline estimated to cost about Rs.1,600 crores, while Central and State Governments would foot 50 and 20 per cent of the cost, 20 per cent of the remaining cost should be borne by Visakhaptnam Steel Plant doubling its capacity, the Commissioner said. Several SEZs and the BARC unit also need water.

The Commissioner said the DPRs had to be submitted by July to the State Government. Answering CPI floor leader A.J. Stalin, he said BOT basis would not be proper for the pipeline.

Earlier, TDP floor leader Ch.V. Pattabhiram charged the corporation with total failure stating that sinking of bores and de-silting of reservoirs was taken up at the fag end of the summer and heads to them were not fixed. Though the then Chief Minister N. Chandrababu Naidu came up with the Kateru lift irrigation scheme as a permanent solution, the corporation had failed to make use of it by creating storage reservoirs.

CPI(M)'s Botta Eswaramma accused the corporation of not having foresight to prevent the current situation. At Gajuwaka water was being given once in three days.

Superintendent Engineer V.Chandraiah said all the 329 bores would be sunk in a fortnight and heads fixed. The 10 mgd Gajuwaka water scheme which could not be started owing to delay in filtration plant would be completed by October.

The Mayor said consultations were held with all important leaders and a council meeting could not be held owing to “Prajapatham,” Mayor Pulusu Janardhana Rao. Congress floor leader Behera Bhaskara Rao said the credit for sanctioning Rs.600 crores worth water schemes for the city went to the late Chief Minister Y.S. Rajasekhar Reddy and showered praise on the Mayor for taking suitable measures to tackle the scarce water situation.

Last Updated on Wednesday, 19 May 2010 04:50
 

Clearer water for city from today

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The Hindu     18.05.2010

Clearer water for city from today

Staff Reporter

JICA plant will ensure faster purification, better monitoring


Rs.55.53-crore plant will treat 74 million litres

Faults in pipelines can be detected in a jiffy


Thiruvananthapuram: Come May 18, many parts of Thiruvananthapuram will get clearer and purer drinking water produced at a state-of-the-art treatment plant, the likes of which Kerala has never seen before.

Seventy-four million litres of filtered and treated drinking water will flow out of this Rs.55.53-crore plant at Chithirakkunnu, Aruvikkara which uses patented technology for the production of drinking water.

At the JICA plant the raw water will first flow into a flume chamber where lime and alum will be mixed.

The removal of impurities takes place in the pulsator-clarifier — a mechanism that uses a technology patented by the French company Degremont.

The suspended impurities in the water are removed by the creation of a vertical pulsating motion inside the rectangular clarifier.

This pulse is triggered by the cyclical creation of vacuum inside a chamber in the centre of the clarifier.

A comparison

At the nearby 86 mld plant run by the Kerala Water Authority this function is carried out by a traditional ‘clarifier.' A huge rotating arm — called the bridge — keeps stirring the water causing the suspended impurities to settle at the bottom of the tank. This is a three-hour process. At the JICA plant the pulsators do the job is 45 minutes.

From the pulsator-clarifier the water flows to the six filter beds in the plant. Here too a patented technology reduces the time normally taken for this process. At the JICA plant the water used to wash the filter beds — the backwash process — is done through a combined action of air and water. This water too is pulsated and purified, thereby substantially reducing the ‘process loss' of water at the plant. The performance of each filter is tested every four hours.

The sludge that cannot be purified further is pumped out from a treatment plant, usually into the source of the water itself. At the JICA plant this sludge is pumped into a lagoon where it is settled and dried.

Gaseous chlorine

Another specialty of the JICA plant is the chlorine contact tank. Here, flowing water is made to repeatedly come into contact with gaseous chlorine. (This ensures better chlorination than the traditional method of mixing chlorine with water.)

The water which is now potable flows to the clear water sump from where it is pumped up to the ‘break-pressure tank.' From this elevated structure water is made to flow out with the aid of gravity.

Computer holds reins

Unlike the existing treatment plants of the KWA the operations of the JICA plant can be controlled via computer. The Supervisory Control and Data Acquisition (SCADA) system located at a master control facility inside the plant allows engineers to monitor the functioning of motors, raw water pumps, pulsator-clarifiers, filter beds and the flow and pressure of water at various points.

Under the package, telemetry stations will be set up along the main transmission lines in the JICA project area. These stations along with the SCADA system will provide critical inputs to a Regional Control Centre (RCC) to be set up at the Vellayambalam campus of the KWA. The RCC can pinpoint in a flash any fault in the kilometres-long pipelines that snake through the city and the panchayats of Sreekariyam, Kudappanakkunnu and Vattiyoorkkavu.

Last Updated on Tuesday, 18 May 2010 04:54
 

Water crisis in municipal limits

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The Hindu     18.05.2010

Water crisis in municipal limits

P. Sridhar


Tribal hamlet in the 22 {+r} {+d} ward of Suryapet municipality craving for piped water supply

Borewell dug by the municipality defunct as there is no motor to pull water from the source




Parched: The water level in a depleted well in Nallacheruvu tanda under Suryapet municipal limits in Nalgonda district.

Nallacheruvu Tanda (NALGONDA DT.): “We are living in the limits of Suryapet municipality, the civic body which hitherto earned distinction as a model municipality in the entire country. But we are deprived of protected drinking water from the municipality till date,” deplored Dharavath Ramulu, a villager of Nallacheruvu Tanda.

The tribal hamlet with a population of more than 300 villagers situated in the 22 {+r} {+d} ward of Suryapet municipality is craving for piped water supply which is eluding them for a long.

“Our day starts with fetching drinking water from the two hand pumps in the village and ends in chalking out plans to procure adequate water for the next day,” said Banothu Nazi.

“Those, who cannot afford to wait in the long queue in front of the bore well or trek a long distance to reach out to the agriculture wells, depend on the old open well in the middle of the village. We have deepened the well of Nizam's era and some of our villagers installed motors to draw water from the well in the absence of any provision for adequate water supply,” a villager pointed out.

The borewell dug by the municipality several years ago remained defunct as there is no motor to pull water from the source, lamented Dharawath Wali, another villager. “Despite living in the municipal limits, we are deprived of even tanker water supply,” she bitterly complained.

“The delay in the completion of the long pending protected drinking water scheme is causing severe ordeal to the people of the tanda,” said Bhaskar, the ward councillor. The scheme should be immediately commissioned to overcome the recurring drinking water problem, he demanded.

When contacted, Suryapet municipal commissioner Bhongiri Srinivas said pipelines have already been laid to provide protected drinking water to the Nallacheruvu tanda from Nagarjunasagar left canal at Dosapadu.

The scheme would be launched soon after completing the interconnection works, he said.

Last Updated on Tuesday, 18 May 2010 04:44
 


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