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Help keep Marina clean: Mayor

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The Hindu 09.01.2010

Help keep Marina clean: Mayor

CHENNAI: Mayor M. Subramanian has urged visitors to the Marina beach to help the Chennai Corporation in maintaining the beach’s beauty and in keeping it clean.

Speaking at a function organised recently to distribute 5,132 free colour television sets to residents of Lloyds Road in Triplicane, he said that equipment worth Rs.10.45 lakh, including lawn movers, edge cutters, tree pruners and mopping machines, had been purchased for maintaining the beach.

Last Updated on Saturday, 09 January 2010 01:55
 

Purification, desalination... it’s all about water

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The Hindu 08.01.2010

Purification, desalination... it’s all about water

Staff Reporter

Expo showcases various products related to water and sewage treatment

— Photo: R.Shivaji Rao

EA Water’s vice-president H.Subramanian, industrialist A.C.Muthiah (centre) and EA Water’s managing director Sunil Ghorawat at the inauguration of “Everything About Water Expo 2010” on Thursday.

CHENNAI: From water purifiers for households to large desalination units, the 7th international ‘Everything About Water Expo 2010’ that got under way on Thursday at Chennai Trade Centre here showcases various technologies and products related to water and sewage treatment.

The three-day expo, being organised by EA Water Private Limited with the Associated Chambers of Commerce and Industry of India, has over 150 stalls of leading companies from 25 countries, including Algeria, Morocco and Pakistan. Nearly 50 companies have featured desalination technologies and various components required to assemble a water treatment unit. Industrialist A.C. Muthiah inaugurated the exhibition.

Highlighting the growing awareness about water and waste water management, EA Water’s managing director Sunil Ghorawat said reverse osmosis technology is the most preferred in Chennai where water quality is on the decline. The cost of RO plants has dropped by half due to increased competition and growing demand.

Nearly 60 per cent of the water and waste water products in the country are imported from China. Only 10 per cent of the requirement is being manufactured in India as the production cost is high, Mr. Ghorawat said.

Rajesh S. Nair of Fontus Water Limited said membrane bio-reactor technology is being used, of late, in sewage treatment as the treated sewage is of better quality. Need for less space for the facility and faster treatment process are some of the other advantages in the technology.

However, it is nearly 30 per cent expensive compared to the conventional technology. Conferences and training workshops on water reuse are being organised as part of the exhibition.

The visitors could also get free consultation on water purification and sewage treatment at the ‘Dr.H2O’ stall.

Leading consultants would clarify doubts regarding water disinfection technologies, sewage recycling and industrial effluent treatment.

Nemmeli desalination plant

S.Natarajan, Head (sales) of Va Tech Wabag Limited, who was one of the participants, said the company had got the contract to establish Chennai Metrowater’s 100 million litres a day desalination plant in Nemmeli. It would be launching the work in mid-February.

As membranes would be introduced in the preliminary filtration level, the plant would have quicker treatment process and consume less space.

Last Updated on Friday, 08 January 2010 00:36
 

PWD, TNSCB flout norms to evict slum dwellers

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The New Indian Express 07.01.2010

PWD, TNSCB flout norms to evict slum dwellers

 

CEHNNAI: “We are the ones who help keep the city clean. Now the government has decided they no longer want us in Singara Chennai. They are throwing us out of our homes, where we have been staying for ages, to some dumpyard far away from the city,” said an anguished Vijaya.

The slum dweller was testifying at a public hearing, organised to focus on the issue of development induced slum evictions.

Similar tales of woe narrated by the evicted slum dwellers from 40 slums in the city on Tuesday brought to light the undemocratic practices adopted by the PWD and Tamil Nadu Slum clearance Board (TNSCB) in uprooting these people from their homes and banishing them into hell holes like Kannagi Nagar and Semmencheri 30km away from the city.

Under the Slum Clearance Act of 1971, a certain set of procedures has to be followed that were completely flouted by these bodies.

TNSCB had failed to serve notice to the slum dwellers and had evicted them by inti­midation of the local police and then had ferried them in city garbage trucks to their destination, Kannagi Nagar.

The government’s commitment to provide for a slum-free Chennai by 2013 is obviously done by adopting strong-arm tactics.

These slum dwellers were mainly evicted due to projects like the Elevated Expressway, Metro Rail, Coastal Elevated Expressway, road expansion and river water cleaning projects.

Resettlement colonies at Kannagi Nagar and Semmencheri have been textbook examples of social problems, replete with high suicide rates, crime and lack of supportive infrastructure. Most people, daily wagers, travel back into the city to get their families a square meal.

“Dumping new settlers to the already polluted colonies is only going to compound the problems further,” said Dr K Shanmugavelayutham, Coordinator, and Chennai Slum Dwellers Rights Movement.

Geetha Ramakrishnan from Unorganised Workers Federation said, “The only remedy is to organise ourselves and stage protests till we find solutions and make the politicians sit up and take notice.”

Last Updated on Thursday, 07 January 2010 08:07
 


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