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Muttathara sewage plant to be commissioned on November 27

November 20, 2013 01:41 pm | Updated November 16, 2021 07:56 pm IST - THIRUVANANTHAPURAM

The 107-mld plant is set up at a cost of Rs.80 crore

POLLUTION CONTROL: Urban Affairs Minister Manjalamkuzhy Ali inspecting the new sewage treatment plant at Muttathara in the city on Tuesday. Photo: S. Mahinsha

Chief Minister Oommen Chandy will commission the State’s first modern sewage treatment plant at Muttathara here at 4 p.m. on November 27 .

Urban Affairs Minister Manjalamkuzhi Ali, addressing the media after a visit to the plant here on Tuesday, said the 107-million litres a day (mld) plant, being set up at a cost of Rs.80 crore on a 100-acre expanse, had a total project cost of Rs.240 crore.

The Delhi-based UEM group had completed the plant, the ownership and operations of which would be overseen by the Thiruvananthapuram Municipal Corporation. The Kerala Water Authority had coordinated and supervised work on the plant, which would be using the activated sludge and extended aeration technology, the Minister said.

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One of the biggest such plants in the country to use this technology and one intended to convince the public that sewage could indeed be treated without polluting or posing problems to the surroundings, the plant would be treating around 40 mld only in the beginning since the sewerage network in the city was yet to be completed, Mr. Ali said.

According to officials of the Kerala Sustainable Urban Development Project (KSUDP), only 30 per cent of the city was covered by a sewerage network. The network was present only in five ‘blocks’ out of the total of 18 ‘sewerage blocks’ that the city was divided into. Work on extending the network was progressing, the officials said, adding that the network was currently being installed in Attipra, Ulloor, Kadakampally, Nemam, Pappanamcode, Thiruvallam, Attukal, Kaladi and Kalippankulam.

The Minister, who said the treated effluent or treated waste-water from the plant was currently being discharged into the Parvathy Puthanar canal, said plans were on to utilize the same for landscaping, gardening and other purposes. The sludge from the plant was found to be suitable and without side effects as manure.

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