Urban News

  • Increase font size
  • Default font size
  • Decrease font size
India Newspapers

Bhubaneswar Municipal Corporation installs new lights to save energy

Print PDF

The Times of India          17.02.2014

Bhubaneswar Municipal Corporation installs new lights to save energy

BHUBANESWAR: The process to replace power-guzzling traditional street lights with energy-efficient ones began on Saturday.

Once completed, the project promises to save Bhubaneswar Municipal Corporation (BMC) Rs 2 crore annually from its power bill.

BMC on Saturday installed 20 energy-efficient LED street lights, in the first phase, on the stretch between Sishu Bhawan Square and Capital Hospital Square.

The civic body claimed that this was the first-ever energy-efficient street lights installed on public-private partnership (PPP) mode in the country. A Mumbai-based private company, which has expertise in providing energy-efficient street lights, has taken up the installation.

"We have made a 10-year agreement with the private company, which will maintain the street lights from its own pockets. The plan is to install about 20,000 such street lights in phases," said BMC commissioner Sanjib Mishra. He said the civic body would have to pay Rs 300 per light point to the company.

"Annually, the civic body will be paying Rs 60 lakh for 20,000 lights," said Mishra.

The agreement with the company stipulates that 90 per cent of the revenue earned by saving the energy (cutting the electricity bills), will go to the private company, while BMC will get 10 per cent. "If the BMC saves Rs 100 a month by installing the energy-efficient street lights, the private agency will get Rs 90," said a BMC official. He said 80% of BMC's power bill would be saved by installing these lights.

The monitoring of the street lights will be done online. "There will be high-end technology to track the functioning of the street lights. We will find out about technical snags sitting at one place," said the official.

Timers will also be installed on lampposts so that the lights automatically switch off after 6am. Besides, after 10pm, the lights will get dimmer thanks to new technology. "The new technology will help check the illumination of the lights and improvise meter reading. There are around 9,000 individual drop (switch) points in the city," said an official.

BMC, which has been paying Rs 5 crore annually towards electricity consumption, will have to pay just Rs 3 crore after installation of the new street lights.

 

Amma Mess to dish out idlis for Re 1

Print PDF

The Times of India          17.02.2014

Amma Mess to dish out idlis for Re 1

BANGALORE: After NaMo's chai pe charcha (chat over a cuppa of tea), it's now the Amma Mess that's looking to strike a chord with voters of Bangalore.

Tamil Nadu chief minister J Jayalalithaa's novel scheme, the Amma Mess that's taken Tamil Nadu by storm by selling food at dirt-cheap prices, was launched in Bangalore on Sunday. The menu here is not as munificent as in TN, though, restricted as it is to idlis at Re 1 apiece.

The food stall was opened bang opposite Kalasipalya Police Station, a busy area off KR Market, to coincide with Jayalalithaa's birthday -- which astrologically falls on Sunday but officially on February 24. The inaugural day had a bumper offer: free idlis. Over 6,000 idlis were served to customers on Day 1.

The budget canteen will serve hot idlis with sambar between 7am and 10am on Sundays. "We'll make it an everyday affair after some weeks because there are some logistical issues to be sorted out," said Bangalore-based AIADMK leader KR Krishna Raju, an ardent follower of Jayalalithaa for the past 40 years .

Inspired by Raju, more Jaya supporters in the city are likely to set up such canteens.

Raju, a former AIADMK secretary of Karnataka, has been conducting such unique programmes to commemorate her birthday every year. The last time the she visited Karnataka over a court case, she made it a point to meet Raju and express her gratitude to him.

"I've involved some poor slum women to prepare these idlis. I'm confident of sustaining this programme for a year but I'm hopeful that by then, the Karnataka government will provide some kind of help and open more such canteens," Raju said.

Raju plans to meet chief minister Siddaramaiah and submit a memorandum seeking to open such budget canteens, which help the poor who struggle with inflation and other factors in major cities.

FAN FOLLOWING FOR AMMA

About 200 Amma eateries operate across Tamil Nadu, feeding around 2 lakh people a day. They've won Jayalalithaa a big fan following.

Women from self-help groups manage the canteens, while revenue officials maintain accounts. Each canteen is manned by 15 women, who're paid Rs 300 a day. The TN Warehousing Corporation supplies rice at subsidized prices to these eateries, according to Bangalore-based AIADMK workers.

 

Corporation budget to focus on e-governance, transport

Print PDF

The Hindu             17.02.2014

Corporation budget to focus on e-governance, transport

Special Correspondent

Highlighting e-governance projects and developments in urban transport sector, the civic administrators of Kochi Corporation will present their plans for the next fiscal on Monday. They will also put forward a proposal for treating septage in the budget.

B. Bhadra, Deputy Mayor and chairperson of the Finance Standing Committee of the Corporation, will present the budget at the council hall at 10.30 a.m.

According to a civic administrator, the e-governance programme was all set to be launched. City roads are in good condition and the Unified Metropolitan Transport Authority is about to be formed. There had also been significant improvement in the revenue of the local body, which would go up in the coming days, said the civic administrator.

The budget would reflect the ground realities and project the future growth path of the city, said the civic administrator.

At the same time, strained relation between the factions in the Congress is sure to create unpleasant moments for the ruling dispensation.

The ‘I’ faction leaders in the council have openly revolted against the regime and accused the administration of failing to implement any of the promises made earlier.

T.J. Vinod, chairman of the Development Standing Committee of the Corporation, said the administration didn’t take any effort to implement the promises made in the last budgets.

Except for Kochi marathon, the civic administration could not translate into reality any of its promises. A section of the Congress councillors was not involved in the preparatory works. The civic administration had failed in governance, Mr. Vinod said. K.N. Sunilkumar, the parliamentary party secretary of the CPI(M) in the council, pointed out that the civic administration could not take forward projects such as formation of Kochi Metro Transport Corporation, new waste treatment plant at Brahmapuram and development of Thammanam-Pullepady road.

The authorities even backtracked from its earlier decision to assign KITCO the task of preparing project documents for the Pachalam rail overbridge. It had also promised to transport refuse from the city to the waste treatment plant during night hours in covered vehicles. The local body could not keep its word on any of these promises, he said.

 


Page 254 of 4907