Water authority remains inactive as Kochi struggles to quench thirst

March 31, 2013 01:31 am | Updated 02:54 am IST - Kochi:

DRY SPELL: Despite the Kerala Water Authority's claims of increasing the supply, people in the city have to depend on tanker lorries for water. Photo: Special Arrangement

DRY SPELL: Despite the Kerala Water Authority's claims of increasing the supply, people in the city have to depend on tanker lorries for water. Photo: Special Arrangement

With water consumption going up and the supply remains stagnant, people who depend on the water distribution network are facing a hard time this summer. In many areas, they have resorted to using pumps to pull as much water out of the pipes as possible, even though it’s illegal and invites harsh penalty from the Kerala Water Authority (KWA).

Most of the Water Authority sub offices have stopped giving new connections in the district. Panchayats like Chellanam, Cheranelloor, Varapuzha, Mulavukkad and Eloor are among the worst-hit. The supply pipelines have been empty for over a month now.

Demand goes up

Though the demand in Kochi in 2012-13 was around 410 million litres a day, no action has been taken to meet the demand. A KWA official said the Aluva water works that supplies the water in the city was increasing its capacity from 225 mld up to 257 mld. Yet, this summer people have had to depend on tanker lorries to meet their demand. The water consumption level of an individual had been recently revised (prior figures about 4 years ago) from 40 litres a day to 70 litres in rural areas and from 150 litres to 200 litres a day in urban areas.

KWA helpless

The Water Authority has no system of its own for tanker lorry supply, leaving the work with local bodies. “We cannot afford to have a system of dedicated water supply because of the power disruption in the State,” said a senior official at the Water Authority.

“The usage of motor pumps to suck water is rampant in Chellanam,” said panchayat president, K.P. Thankachan. This had resulted in saline water getting mixed with the distribution system, he said. The situation has been continuing for years.

Only 40 per cent of people in the panchayat have water connection. Others depend on public taps and water tankers provided by the panchayat. Despite the supply of six water tankers, the panchayat has requested the government to provide two more tankers.

The situation at Cheranelloor panchayat is worse, according to panchayat president Suresh Babu.

A sit-in by the residents a few months ago resulted in some water getting diverted to this panchayat and repair works on the pipelines. But the crisis continues as many parts of the panchayat still lacks supply, he said. The panchayat is still awaiting the Collector’s sanction for water tankers supply as it does not have sufficient resources to provide water through tanker lorries.

The neighbouring Varapuzha panchayat provides 36,000 litres of water through tanker lorries every day even though 80 per cent of the people have water connections, said Mercy Johny, panchayat president.

The Maradu project of 100 million litres a day under the Jawaharlal Nehru National Urban Renewal Mission is one of the major venture that is likely to resolve much of the woes plaguing the supply system.

However, mired in controversy over laying of pipelines from Piravom to Maradu, the project is being implemented at a pace that would perhaps be finished sometime early next year, according to senior officials in KWA.

The sanction for the project had come in 2007 and the initial work had begun in 2008-09. Nearly three years were lost in taking the project ahead.

Another project that is expected to provide more water is the augmentation work at Muppathadam that will provide about 8.5 mld to serve some of the nearby panchayaths’ demands after meeting Kadamakudy’s 4.5 mld.

A major project, Rs. 800 crores, with a capacity of 190 mld proposed at Kalamassery is still on paper.

According to senior officials at KWA it might take up to three months for getting the sanction for the project as the Union Ministry’s queries regarding the project were answered only recently. Since the project will be the main supply augmentation plant for the existing network, the work can be completed in about two-three years, said the officials.

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