Urban News

  • Increase font size
  • Default font size
  • Decrease font size
Public Health / Sanitation

Stalin inaugurates sewer network at Guindy estate

Print PDF

The Hindu 19.12.2009

Stalin inaugurates sewer network at Guindy estate

Staff Reporter

It will cater for 1.02 lakh people in Guindy, adjoining areas

Photo: R.Shivaji Rao

Deputy Chief Minister M.K.Stalin studies the sketch of the underground sewerage network at the Guindy industrial estate on Friday. —

CHENNAI: An underground sewer network to cater for nearly 1.02 lakh people in the Guindy Industrial Estate and adjoining residential localities was inaugurated by Deputy Chief Minister M. K. Stalin on Friday.

Opening the sewage main pumping station constructed as part of the Rs.7.35-crore project, he said that apart from 610 industrial units in the Estate, 398 households in the neighbouring areas such as Arulayamman Pettai, Reddy Street, Nagireddy Thottam and Labour Colony have been provided with sewer connections. Of the total project cost, Rs.2.57 crore was contributed by Guindy Industrial Estate Manufacturers Association.

The network would help in arresting the discharge of sewage into Adyar river through seven outfalls in the area, he added.

On the occasion, Mr.Stalin distributed the sewerage connection sanction orders to some of the beneficiaries, including industrial units.

Chennai Metrowater officials said the 20-km network is connected to two pumping stations with a cumulative capacity of nearly 18 million litres a day (mld) catering to north and south phases of the estate. A third pumping station with a capacity of 2.8 mld is for exclusively pumping out sewage from Nagireddy Thottam as a deep sewer system was not feasible there due to space constraints.

The network has been linked to Nesapakkam sewage treatment plant. It took almost three years to complete the project as there were no records about the other infrastructure facilities in the estate. “We found 50 buried culverts while implementing the project,” an official of Metrowater said.

The project was one of the components of Integrated Infrastructure Development scheme taken up to improve facilities at the estate. Municipal Administration and Water Supply Secretary Niranjan Mardi, SIDCO Chairman and Managing Director N.S.Palaniappan and Metrowater Managing Director Shivdas Meena participated in the function.

Last Updated on Saturday, 19 December 2009 02:57
 

Residents plan cleaning operation at Elliot’s beach

Print PDF

Deccan Chronicle 18.12.2009

Residents plan cleaning operation at Elliot’s beach

December 18th, 2009
By Our Correspondent

Dec. 17: On the Independence Day this year, the Marina was declared plastic-free and disposable cups, plates, bags or even water sachets are no longer allowed on the 4.5-km-long stretch from lighthouse to Anna memorial. But, anti-plastic law along the Marina alone cannot work.

A survey carried out by Reclaim Chennai Beaches Campaign (RCBC), a social movement formed by a group of like-minded youth and residents of Besant Nagar, found a total of 20,000 pieces of trash, including 8,500 plastic cups, water sachets and disposable spoons, 1,735 pieces of broken glass and bits of balloon strewn along the 800-metre-long Besant Nagar beach, the second most popular in the city.

The survey was conducted more than a year after the Chennai corporation executed its Rs 2.43 crore package for beach beautification in Besant Nagar. “No beauty has been added to the Besant Nagar beach. In fact, the city corporation has funded only two trash cans and one flower bin, put up by Neelmetal, for garbage collection at Besant Nagar beach. It is time we reclaim our public property,” Mr Siddharth Hande, a member of the 350-member youth collective, a subsidiary of RCBC, said.

In a bid to create awareness among the people and promote zero waste, the group has planned to organise a massive clean up programme on January 30 and 31, 2010.

“The city administration cannot be taking care of the whole issue every time. Each citizen has the social responsibility and we are planning for a massive programme for creating awareness among the general public to educate them on how to handle waste, through video clippings and movies,” says Ms Sharadha Shankar of Save Chennai Beaches Campaign, which is working along with RCBC.

 

RAAC launches ‘Donate your Waste’ programme

Print PDF

The Hindu 18.12.2009

RAAC launches ‘Donate your Waste’ programme

Special Correspondent

COIMBATORE: On the first anniversary of its “Wealth out of Waste” programme on Wednesday, the Residents’ Awareness Association of Coimbatore launched yet another scheme – “Donate your Waste” -- to prevent littering of roads and public places.

A disposal unit containing three bins will be provided to residents to segregate their dry waste. One bin is for newspapers and magazines, one for plastics and another for papers and cartons.

RAAC had begun a year ago the Wealth out of Waste project in association with ITC. Under this project, educational institutions, commercial and industrial establishments could store paper waste and plastic bags in separate bags and hand these over to the ITC for a price. In his special address at the inauguration, Commissioner of Customs, Central Excise and Service Tax C. Rajendiran said wisdom lay in finding a solution to poor waste management through waste segregation and waste reduction.

“RAAC is only asking you to donate waste and not money and this is only with a view to creating clean environs,” he said.

“People wonder why Singapore is such a clean city. It is because the country cut down waste generation from 7,700 tonnes a day in 2001 to 7,000 tonnes in 2005,” he said. Presiding over the launch, Unit Head of ITC C.A. Nair said the Waste-to-Wealth programme yielded 60 tonnes to 70 tonnes of paper waste a month. “It should increase to 2,000 tonnes a month; we have a long way to go,” he said.

Last Updated on Friday, 18 December 2009 01:38
 


Page 159 of 200