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Water Supply

Cooum fenced for better cleaning

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The Hindu             05.11.2013

Cooum fenced for better cleaning

Much neededThe chain link fence will ensure trash trapped beneath wooden bridges is blocked off, making it easier to remove, for free flow of water —Photo: M. Vedhan
Much neededThe chain link fence will ensure trash trapped beneath wooden bridges is blocked off, making it easier to remove, for free flow of water —Photo: M. Vedhan

The small wooden bridges built across the Cooum river near Island Grounds for the convenience of visitors making their way to the exhibition area, have begun to pose fresh problems to the already polluted river. Floating waste accumulates from areas upstream, gets trapped beneath these wooden bridges and obstructs the free flow of water.

In a bid to ensure that the river is clear of such trash during the monsoon, the Water Resources Department has blocked the waterway using a chain link fence in two locations upstream of Island Grounds.

“We have used such a netted fence for the first time to block the floating waste at a specific place in the river. The waste will be removed every day so that the river can flow freely. We had to resort to such emergency measures as the accumulated garbage was posing a problem at just less than one kilometre from the river’s mouth,” said a WRD official.

The stretch where the Cooum river merges with North Buckingham Canal near Chennai Central station and near Muthusamy bridge has been fenced.

Cleaning is easier when the river’s width is between 8 and 12 metres. The river’s width goes up to 20 metres near Island Grounds, and further blockages by the small bridges were hampering the clearing of garbage and silt, the official said.

Float-mounted equipment is being used to clean the waste at various stretches of the river. In the last month, about 250 lorry-loads of silt and garbage have been removed from the 7.4 km stretch of the waterway between Koyambedu and Napier Bridge, where the river meets the sea. From the 2.4 km stretch between Central Station and Napier Bridge alone, about 30 lorry loads have been removed in the past week.

The stretch is filled with waste such as thermocol, packaging material and weeds, and frequent cleaning was essential, the official added. Machines are also engaged daily in clearing the sand bars from the Cooum river’s mouth and maintaining the waterway’s width at 40 metres to avoid flooding, he said.

However, a portion of the river spanning 4.5 km between Egmore and Chetpet remains an eyesore as the department has not taken up desilting due to a tussle with the National Highways Authority of India with regard to the Chennai Port-Maduravoyal elevated expressway project.

 

Japanese team reviews municipal water project

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The Hindu            30.10.2013

Japanese team reviews municipal water project

Staff Reporter

As a prelude to sanctioning funds, a team from the Japan International Cooperation Agency on Tuesday reviewed the drinking water project proposed by the Dindigul Municipality, and inspected Athoor dam, the main drinking water source.

The team, comprising Nakamura Yui and Mihir, held talks with Municipal Chairman V. Marudha Raj and officials at the Dindigul municipality.

Municipal officials explained to the visiting team that, in order to augment revenue, the municipality proposed to revise the levy on domestic drinking water connections from Rs.45 to Rs.150, and for non-domestic services from Rs.150 to Rs.560.

The deposit was proposed to be revised from Rs.3000 to Rs.10,000 for domestic connections, and from Rs.6000 to Rs 20,000 with respect to other connections, they added.

Ms.Nakamura asked if the public would accept such a steep revision or protest the move.

D. Rajendran, senior assistant vice-president, Tamil Nadu Urban Development Project III (TNUDP), was confident that consumers would accept the rate hike in view of the municipality’s plan to supply water daily rather than once a week as at present. The present drinking water supply stood at 14 million litres per day (MLD) – five MLD from the Athoor Kamarajar dam and nine MLD from the Cauvery Drinking Water Project – and the per capita supply was 68 litres. Water demand was projected to be 29.04 MLD in 2015, 33.03 MLD in 2030 and 37.05 MLD in 2045. Five MLD would be needed to supply water to villages covered by the project. The total demand stood at 42.05 MLD, according to officials.

Athoor dam would be deepened to improve the storage level and to tap 16.83 MLD of water. The municipality proposed to lay 227-km-long pipelines to replace the corroded pipes.

There are plans to construct overhead tanks at Saveriarpalayam, Kudaganar area, Bharathipuram and near the municipal office. A new water treatment plant is also on the anvil. The total cost of the project is Rs.70.5 crore.

A total of 30,000 service connections would be brought under the new main pumping station, officials said.

 

Centre approves water supply scheme

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The Hindu            29.10.2013

Centre approves water supply scheme

Karthik Madhavan

The residents of 60 Wards of the Coimbatore Corporation have good news from the civic body: they will soon get drinking water on a daily basis.

For, the Union Government approved on Monday the corporation’s Rs.-451.60 crore scheme, said G. Latha, Corporation Commissioner.

She told The Hindu that the corporation planned to use the money to replace the water supply pipelines in the city as they were old and unfit to meet the current needs. The old city area has water supply lines for 1,375km.

The funding for the project would be along the lines of the Jawaharlal Nehru National Urban Renewal Mission ones — 50 per cent from the Union Government, 20 per cent from the State Government and the rest from the urban local body that is the beneficiary — in this case, the Coimbatore Corporation.

Ms. Latha said that the Coimbatore Corporation would go in for soft loan to meet its share of the project — Rs. 135.48 crore, as the amount was huge and the corporation could not afford it without external help. Once the corporation replaced the pipelines — the project was estimated to take 29 months from the date of the start of work — it would supply 135 litres per capita a day. And that supply would be scientific.

The corporation would automate the entire supply system. The valves would be automated and the water flow would be computerised. The water pressure management too would be automatic.

Likewise, the corporation would install automatic meters to record water consumption. In the implementation of the scheme, the corporation would also lay a feeder main supply line for 105km, construct 29 storage reservoirs, and two treatment plants.

But the sources of the water supply would remain the same — the Siruvani water supply scheme and the Dedicated Pilloor Drinking Water Supply Scheme or Pilloor-II. From the two water supply schemes the corporation got around 250 million litres a day.

For the added areas, the corporation had started a similar project — to replace the pipelines and lay new ones to supply drinking water. The project was aimed at making the added areas on a par with the old city area in terms of water supply.

Citizens to get 135 litres of drinking water a day

It will take 29 months to replace pipelines

Automatic meters to record water consumption

Added areas not covered under the scheme

 


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