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Revision of building rules to be studied

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The Hindu 11.12.2009

Revision of building rules to be studied

Staff Reporter

Corporation to recommend areas for flyovers

Photo: K. Ananthan

Chairman of the Confederation of Indian Industry, Coimbatore Zone, Ravi Sam (left) hands over a wish-list for Coimbatore city to Deputy Chief Minister M.K. Stalin (third left) on Thursday. –

COIMBATORE: The Town and Country Planning Department will study the demand for establishing a Coimbatore Development Authority similar to Chennai Metropolitan Development Authority and revision of building rules and the Coimbatore Master Plan, Deputy Chief Minister M.K. Stalin said here on Thursday.

At an interactive meeting organised by Confederation of Indian Industry (CII) he said that the Municipal Administration Department would study the demand to bring Kurichi, Kuniamuthur, Kalapatty and Koundampalayam under the Corporation limits. The Coimbatore Corporation would examine and make recommendations regarding the industry’s demand for construction of flyovers in some areas of the city.

Housing

He said that under the Jawaharlal Nehru National Urban Renewal Mission, efforts would be expedited to provide permanent housing facility and make the city slum-free. The corporation and the District Administration should jointly remove encroachments on water bodies, roads and Government land.

The Deputy Chief Minister said he was aware of the industries’ demand to approve expansion projects of red category industries that were established within five km from water bodies before 1998 and wanted to expand operations now with effluent treatment facilities (zero discharge). A befitting and good decision would be taken by the Government soon.

Belgium company Hansen Drives was investing Rs. 1,500 crore in Coimbatore to manufacture gear boxes and the Deputy Chief Minister would inaugurate it on January 23.

According to the Centre for Monitoring Indian Economy, till June 2009, Coimbatore had attracted Rs. 27,879 core investment from 274 mega projects.

Electronics

In the recent years, Coimbatore district had developed in electronics sector. It had five Electronic Special Economic Zones. During 2008-2009, IT exports from here was about Rs. 360 crore.

The TIDEL Park here was coming up at Rs. 370 crore and it would give employment to 12,000 peoople.

Infrastructure improvement would help in industrial growth. The Karur Coimbatore National Highway development work for 114 km was on at Rs. 178 crore and works were over for 60 km at Rs. 94 crore. The rest would be completed soon.

A consultant had been appointed to study the technical and financial feasibility to lay a western bypass road through the Public Private Partnership mode. The National Highway Authority of India had taken up work to convert 82 km of road from Chengapalli Coimbatore to Tamil Nadu Kerala border into four-lane and six-lane road. The Coimatore -Mettupalayam National Highway 67 widening was taken up by NHAI, he said.

Rajeev Ranjan, Principal Secretary – Industries Department, said an industries portal would be launched soon. Tamil Nadu was one of the leading industrialised States.

Clusters

About 60 clusters had been identified in the State for cluster development. C.K. Ranganathan, Chairman of the CII Tamil Nadu State said the industries had sought supply of power to High Tension industries during peak hours (6 p.m. to 10 p.m.) by purchasing from other States and this was expected to be implemented soon.

Ravi Sam, Chairman of the Coimbatore Zone of the CII, said the city wanted better infrastructure so that it developed into a leading tier two city.

Last Updated on Friday, 11 December 2009 01:17
 

Plastic waste sorting equipment launched

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The Hindu 11.12.2009

Plastic waste sorting equipment launched

Special Correspondent

CHENNAI: And, now technology that helps segregate plastic based on the polymer to curb wastage during recycling or filter out the bad mangoes in the bunch to ensure that only good fruit enters the market.

The Central Electronics Engineering Research Institute (CEERI) unit in Chennai on Wednesday transferred to industry two technologies developed at its laboratories on the Taramani campus of the Council of Scientific and Industrial Research.

The plastic waste sorting system project supported by the Ministry of Environment and Forests deploys Near Infra Red (NIR) spectroscopy to identify poly-ethylene terephthelate (PET) materials before recycling. The equipment, which uses NIR rays in the 700-2,500 nano metre electromagnetic spectrum, will segregate different kinds of plastic on a scale of sensor values for each base polymer.

Apart from carrying immense social benefit, the equipment is expected to address a major issue for recycling industries — the enormous wastage when different types of plastic get mixed up during recycling of PET. At present, the equipment can differentiate six types of plastic — poly-ethylene, poly-ethylene terephthelate, poly-propylene, poly-vinyl chloride, high density poly ethylene and poly-styrene. However, the experimental lab model sorts only PET on a throughput of 200 kg per hour. A more diverse differentiation of the plastic types and higher throughput is possible in industrial application, scientists said. The technology was transferred to Bangalore-based Dintis Technologies.

CEERI also showcased a device that segregates good mangoes from the bad at the maturation stage. The X-ray imaging-based mango sorting system uses the same technique deployed at baggage screening at airports and helps detects spongy tissue or seed weevil infestation that are not apparent externally. The machine is useful for traders exporting bulk quantities of exotic varieties such as the Alphonse mango. The research project funded by the Department of Science and Technology uses non-destructive screening of mangoes and maps the x-ray image for internal decay. In lab conditions the equipment with a capacity for scanning 1.2 tonnes of mangoes per hour achieved a detection accuracy rate of 95 per cent for spongy tissue and 98 per cent for seed weevil. The technology was transferred to Proteck Circuits and Systems in Chennai.

Pilani-headquartered CEERI Director Chandra Shekhar exchanged the technology transfer agreements with K. Balasubramanian, managing director, Proteck Systems and Dintis Thomas, managing director of Dintis Technologies. R. K. Gupta, head, Technology Networking and Business Development, CEERI, Nagesh Iyer, Director, Structural Engineering Research Centre and Chander Parkash, DST scientist were present.

Last Updated on Friday, 11 December 2009 01:10
 

Salem Corporation distributes mosquito nets for septic tanks

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The Hindu 10.12.2009

Salem Corporation distributes mosquito nets for septic tanks

Staff Reporter

For use in households and commercial establishments

 


Mayor J. Rekha Priyadarshini inaugurated the distribution of mosquito nets to residents

Corporation has allotted sufficient funds to purchase adequate number of nets


Photo: P. GOUTHAM

To control pests: Mayor J. Rekha Priyadarshini distributing mosquito nets to residents in Ward 43 in Salem on Wednesday. —

SALEM: In a bid to control the mosquito menace in the city, the Salem Corporation started distribution of mosquito nets for septic tanks free of cost to residents on Wednesday.

Inaugurated

Mayor J. Rekha Priyadarshini inaugurated the distribution of mosquito nets to the residents in Ward 43.

The civic body had taken up the exercise as a part of its drive to control the mosquito menace in the city and keep the pests at bay.

The drive was launched a few months ago following sharp criticism from the public that the Corporation had grossly failed to control the menace.

Officials said that the civic body would provide the mosquito nets for septic tanks to all the households, commercial establishments and government organisations free of cost.

It had already allotted sufficient funds to purchase the nets that would be necessary for the purpose.

Repellents

Sanitary workers had already sprayed mosquito repellents in the wells, overhead tanks and water containers.

Fogging was also being carried out in various parts of the city.

The civic body printed over two lakh handbills carrying information on mosquito control measures to spread awareness among people.

The civic administration was also conducting mass cleaning camps and awareness camps in various parts, officials said.

It has been announced that residents in the city could contact the sanitary personnel on the following mobile numbers if they did not receive the nets: 99407-46915, 99763-53014.

Last Updated on Thursday, 10 December 2009 05:11
 


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