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Water Supply

Floodwater draining into sea will be tapped for city

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The Hindu              24.12.2013

Floodwater draining into sea will be tapped for city

K.Lakshmi

Telemetric river water level recorders will be installed

Soon a portion of floodwater that regularly gets drained into the sea could be saved to augment the city’s water supply.

The State Ground and Surface Water Resources Data Centre of Water Resources Department (WRD) will install telemetric river water level recorders in the five rivers falling in the Chennai region. These recorders, which will be fixed at points close to where the river meets the sea, will measure the water level.

Officials of the WRD’s Centre said that once floodwater crosses the point where the recorders are fixed, they will send alerts to engineers. It is then up to the engineers to make sure that the surplus floodwater is diverted to other waterbodies located upstream. By doing so, the water that otherwise gets washed out can be stored and used to augment supply for the city.

The department will fix the equipment near Nandambakkam along Adyar river, Vallur anicut along Kosasthalaiyar river, Lakshmipuram along Araniar river, Chetpet along Cooum river and Panangkattucheri close to Kalpakkam along Palar river.

Besides, the equipment will be installed on 44 sites across the State as part of the Rs.4-crore project.

Annually, a minimum of 1,000 million cubic feet of water, which translates to a month’s supply of drinking water for city, drains into sea through Adyar and Kosasthalaiyar rivers, an official informed.

The equipment will comprise a sensor to record water flow, a data logger that could store data for up to one year and a modem to transmit data to the monitoring room at Taramani and its website. A telemetric rain gauge that would provide data round-the-clock would also be installed. The project will be completed by May next.

 

Disruption in water supply

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The Hindu            20.11.2013 

Disruption in water supply

Because of a breakage in the main pipeline of the Mettur — Salem — Attur Combined Water Supply Scheme, near Five Roads on Tuesday, there would be no water supply to the residents in the corporation limits on November 20.

Repair works would be carried out on Wednesday, a release here has said.

 

Wait till 2016 for 24X7 water supply

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The Times of India             19.11.2013

Wait till 2016 for 24X7 water supply

COIMBATORE: Residents living in old Coimbatore municipal corporation limits will have to wait till 2016 to receive uninterrupted water supply round the clock.

A massive 451.66 crore has been kept for the project which the civic body plans to execute under Engineering, Procurement and Construction (EPC) model, where a contractor would be roped in to carry out construction and planning of execution of the infrastructure as per the project plan. The contractor would also be entrusted with the responsibility of Operation and Maintenance (O&M) of the project with the city corporation supplying water through the newly-laid water distribution and storage network. The city corporation is expected to constitute a Project Implementation Unit (PIU) to review, monitor and participate in the implementation, operation and maintenance of the project.

"We will soon start the tendering process and finalise the projection execution details. The main objective is to revamp the entire water distribution network in the city to ensure uninterrupted water supply in the old corporation limits," said S Sivarasu, deputy commissioner, Coimbatore Municipal Corporation.

As per the project report, a total of 29 additional service reservoirs are to be constructed in the city with a total storage capacity of 40.20 million litres. As of now, the corporation has 34 service reservoirs in the city with combined capacity of 36.73 million litres. The project has been designed for an area of 105.62 sq km area and a population of 10.61 lakh with Pillur dam as the perennial source of bulk water supply and 85 mld from Siruvani reservoir. "We have our own sites in the city to construct the additional reservoirs and it will be completed at the earliest after we commence the project work," said a senior corporation official.

The main challenge before the civic body is revamping the water distribution system and extending it from the existing 1,122 km to 1,467 km with a minimum life period of 30 years. Frequent bursts and leaks have become a feature of the old pipelines. The new distribution system would be mainly laid using high density polyethylene pipes that are claimed to be more durable for a distance of 1,251 km along with 93 kms of cast iron and 33 km of duct iron pipelines.

The civic body in its proposal to the Central Sanctioning and Monitoring Committee has clearly stated that the project would be implemented under EPC with the same contractor entrusted with the Operation and Maintenance of the project. The civic body is also planning to set output targets for the private contractor with adequate provisions for penalties and incentives. The corporation has also specifically mentioned that the estimated O&M payments to the operator would come to Rs 26.89 crore with a scope of five per cent cost escalation every year.

 


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