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Water Supply

Water crisis unlikely in Greater Chennai

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Deccan Chronicle      18.01.2011

Water crisis unlikely in Greater Chennai

January 18th, 2011

an. 17: The city’s perennial water shortage may end in a few years thanks to the 200 mld desalination plant proposed recently besides a 100 mld plant under operation in Minjur and another 100 mld plant under construction in Nemmeli.

The Chennai metropolitan water supply and sewerage board has projected that its overall water requirement would shoot up to 2,248 mld once the existing 174 sqkm city corporation is expanded to 426 sq km “Greater Chennai”.

About nine municipalities, eight town panchayats and 25 village panchayats would be brought fully under CMWSSB after the expansion. The 12 tmcft annual Krishna water supply (the city has not received more than 7.5tmcft from Kandaleru even once) plus Minjur and Nemmeli desalination plants and surface water storage in Poondi, Puzhal, Cholavaram and Chembarambakkam reservoirs would jointly take the capacity to 1,900 mld.

The remaining could be met by using the proposed 200 mld plant near the state capital, said a source. Senior CMWSSB officials told Deccan Chronicle that new water sources would be identified and utilised in a phased manner. “The supplying capacity of CMWSSB would literally be doubled if this happens,” said an official.

Officials added that apart from the proposed 200 mld desalination plant, more projects ought to be taken up in future to meet the steady rise in water demand or the state would face a major water crisis. CMWSSB currently supplies 670 mld to 55 lakh people.

In 1978, it was supplying 240 mld to 30 lakh Chennaites.

 

Last Updated on Tuesday, 18 January 2011 09:55
 

Metrowater pavilion offers testing facility

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The Hindu        14.01.2011

Metrowater pavilion offers testing facility

Staff Reporter

The Chennai Metropolitan Water Supply and Sewerage Board has put up a pavilion at the 37th India Tourist and Industrial Trade Fair 2011 on Island Grounds.

Visitors can assess water quality at a concessional rate of Rs.50 at the stall. The facility will be available between 4 p.m. and 8 p.m. They can bring two litres of samples from open wells or borewells in a bottle or plastic container.

According to a release, the water would be tested for total alkalinity, total hardness, calcium hardness, calcium, magnesium, chlorides, ammoniacal nitrogen, albuminoid nitrogen, nitrate, iron, phosphate, fluoride, and specific conductance.

Visitors could get the results from Water Analysis Laboratory located on 1, New Avadi Road, Kilpauk, after 10 working days. They could also get the results through courier by paying Rs.10 extra, the release said.

 

Bids floated for Vellore drinking water scheme

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The Hindu        11.01.2011

Bids floated for Vellore drinking water scheme

Special Correspondent

Bids have been floated for the Rs.1,295-crore combined drinking water supply scheme of the Vellore Corporation, Deputy Chief Minister M.K. Stalin told the Assembly on Monday.

The project would cover six town panchayats, proposed to be included in the limits of the Vellore Corporation, and 109 rural habitations. Besides, 11 municipalities, five town panchayats and 944 rural habitations would benefit. Administrative sanction was given on December 31. The same day, the bids were floated. They would be opened on February 3.

The project, divided into three packages, would draw water from the Cauvery downstream the Mettur dam and benefit a population of 18.68 lakh. On completion, people in the limits of the Municipal Corporation would receive 135 litres of water per capita per day (LPCD), those in town panchayats 70 LPCD and those in village panchayats 40 LPCD.

Mr. Stalin was answering a question of C. Gnanasekaran (Congress) during Question Hour.

 

 


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