Thursday, March 18, 2010

Kerala panel wants Coca Cola to pay for water damage

Beverage giant Coca Cola's bottling plant in Perumatty in Palakkad district has led to depletion of water resources, a Kerala assembly panel said Thursday and recommended that the multinational company pay compensation to the villagers.

Addressing reporters at the assembly complex, V. Surendran Pillai, chairman of the assembly's Petitions Committee, said the committee members visited Perumatty and found that the bottling plant has led to a decline in the water table. The plant was shut down in 2004 following sustained campaign by the villagers.

'We have recommended that in Palakkad district authorities should carefully look into proposals whenever licences are given to any new industry that uses water as a raw material. The government should come out with an industrial irrigation project for the benefit of the existing commercial industries. Moreover, we have asked for a speedy completion of a drinking water scheme at the Perumatty village council,' said Pillai.

The Coca Cola plant at Plachimada in Perumatty was set up in 1999. The sanction for the company to begin operations was given by the then Left Front government led by E.K. Nayanar.

The assembly committee report comes at a time when an expert panel headed by Additional Chief Secretary K. Jayakumar, constituted to assess the damages caused to the environment at Perumatty due to the bottling plant, is expected to submit its report any time now.

'We understand that the expert panel report is going to be submitted any time. We expect the government to do the needful once that report is submitted,' added Pillai.

The expert panel visited the surrounding areas of the plant on four occasions and held detailed talks with the villagers, but the soft drink giant did not accept the decision to form the expert panel and failed to appear before the panel.

Source: Sify News, 18,3,2010

Tuesday, March 16, 2010

China sets up world’s largest solar water heating system

BEIJING: The largest solar water heating system of the world, comprising tens of thousands of solar cells, has begun operation in China’s Jiangsu province and will reduce carbon dioxide emission by 9,000 tonnes.

According to People’s Daily, the water heating system is composed of solar-powered water heaters with a heat-collector area. Built in an area of about 15 thousand square metres, the system is bigger than two standard pitches combined and can gener ate more than 1,200 tonnes of hot water.

The system is expected to help in saving about 3.9 million yuan per year in energy costs. In addition, it will save 3.5 tonnes of coal and reduce carbon dioxide emission by 9,000 tonnes, sulphur dioxide emission by 100 tonnes and eliminate smoke and ashe s largely.

The solar water heater was apparently part of China’s efforts to keep its commitment to control greenhouses gas emissions by 2020. China says it carbon dioxide emission per unit of GDP would decline by 40 to 45 per cent. — PTI

Source: Business Line 15 March

Delhi’s polluted Yamuna River -- a catastrophe in the making

Methane gas is bubbling up from the black-coloured stew, and the water smells horrible. The holy river Yamuna, once teeming with life, is practically dead, yet a homeless man is rinsing his mouth with the noxious liquid. Under a nearby bridge, scavengers on a self-made raft are fishing out votive offerings that drivers throw from their cars to Yamuna, which is worshipped by Hindus as a goddess.

But it is people and politics that are choking Yamuna to death, and ecologists are warning of a looming environmental catastrophe as World Water Day approaches on March 22.

The river, New Delhi’s lifeline, is reputed to be India’s most polluted as well as one of the most toxic waterways worldwide. The Yamuna provides an example of Indian government policies that are focused on economic growth, often at the cost of the environment.

In the meantime, the river is dying a slow yet unpublicized death, partly because it has mostly vanished from public sight behind concrete after the river was moved. A highway now runs along the old riverbed.

Access to the river is possible at only a few points and glimpses of it can be gained only from road or subway bridges.

Vimlendu K Jha, executive director of the environmental organization Swechha, estimates that 60 per cent of New Delhi’s 14 million people have never seen the river.

“How can you save the Yamuna if nobody ever sees it?” he asks.

The river is indeed rather beautiful -- before it reaches New Delhi and is polluted with raw sewage and toxic waste.

Outside the capital, its waters are clear, birds are sailing above its surface and fishermen cast their nets.

But at this point of its course, most of the river’s waters are held back by an irrigation dam in the neighbouring state of Haryana in violation of federal agreements, which is one of the causes for the problems downstream.

The sluice gates let pass only a trickle, which is then “replenished” with human and industrial sewage as soon as the river reaches New Delhi.

Eighteen major sewage canals in the capital are emptying into the holy river, depleting it of its oxygen.

Authorities in New Delhi have assessed the water as so toxic that they have even prohibited cleaning animals with it. It may only be used to cool industrial machinery.

But the many homeless people living along its banks have no access to a regular tap water supply. They are forced to use the Yamuna’s waters to wash themselves and their clothes. Some even use it for cooking and drinking, according to Jha, because they had no alternative.

“For them, it is better to have unhealthy water than no water at all,” he says.

The Yamuna stretches for 1,370 kilometres, but only 22 kilometres of these flow through New Delhi. It is in this short stretch during which 80 per cent of its pollution is inflicted, Swechha says.

Another 9 per cent of the pollution is attributed to the city of Agra, home to the world-famous Taj Mahal, behind which the Yamuna passes.

The river eventually spills its toxic floods into India’s holiest river, the Ganges.

Although millions of dollars have been spent in recent years to revive the river, Jha said: “We don’t know where the money has gone.

The action plans were useless. Nothing happened. The river is your witness.” Instead, he claims, the pollution is increasing because most sewage treatment plants in New Delhi are not functioning properly.

The river still constitutes the capital’s most important source of drinking water, which is simply pumped from the river before it enters New Delhi. But its toxins also contaminate groundwater, another important drinking water source for the ever-growing metropolis.

“We are just waiting for a disaster to happen,” Jha warns.

“Everyone seems to be thinking the city is run by malls and the metro. It’s not.” That disaster might happen “when people start dying in a plague-like situation” in the capital because of their toxic drinking water, he says.

India and China made progress in access to drinking water:UN

United Nations, Mar 16 (PTI) India and China, home to more than a third of the world's population, have made "considerable progress" in providing drinking water to their people, according to a new UNICEF-WHO report.

"Both countries have made considerable progress," said the report entitled 'Progress on Sanitation and Drinking Water'.

The study found that in India, 88 per cent of the population of 1.2 billion use drinking water from improved sources of water as compared to 72 per cent in 1990 while in China, 89 per cent of the population of 1.3 billion use drinking water from improved sources, up from 67 per cent in 1990.

Improved water sources include public standpipes, boreholes, protected dug wells and springs, rainwater collection and household connections.

By the nature of their construction, they "adequately protect the source from outside contamination, in particular from faecal matter," according to WHO.

Saturday, March 13, 2010

Groundwater in 33% of India undrinkable

TOI, 12 March, 2010, NEW DELHI: Ground water in more than a third of Indian districts is not fit for drinking. The government, in reply to a parliamentary question, admitted that iron levels in ground water are higher than those prescribed in 254 districts while fluoride levels have breached the safe level in 224 districts.

The alarming situation could bring trouble for the government, which has promised to provide drinking water to all habitations by 2012 under the millennium development goals. While ground water is not the only source of drinking water that government utilises, it is one of the key supplies and the dependence on ground water has been increasing over years.

The government, in its reply, said salinity had risen beyond tolerance levels in 162 districts while arsenic levels were found higher than permissible limits in 34 districts.

States like Rajasthan, Karnataka and Gujarat seemed to be worst affected. Twenty-one of the 26 districts of Gujarat were found to have dangerous salinity levels and 18 had breached safe fluoride levels. The Central Ground Water Board (CGWB) found 21 of 31 districts in the southern state of Karnataka to be contaminated with iron and 20 districts with higher levels of fluoride. In the case of Rajasthan, ground water in 27 districts was found to be too saline, 30 districts had higher levels of fluoride and 28 suffered from iron contamination.

The national capital does not fare any better, with five of its nine districts showing fluoride contamination and two showing salinity. Pockets of all the nine districts had high iron content.

While urban centres in the country deploy water treatment systems before supplying water to homes, the costs of cleaning up as well as chances of contamination remain. Removal of heavy metals like arsenic, though, remains a problem the government is unable to tackle where the source of water is only from the ground aquifers.

Experts have warned that lopsided water management has led to depletion of ground water aquifers and this, in many cases, has caused increasing contamination as people dig deeper into the ground to extract water. Cases of habitations that were provided drinking water sources based on ground water slipping back have also been highlighted recently.

Drinking water scarcity in Nagaland

Kohima: With intensification of the prolonged dry spell, acute drinking water scarcity has gripped this capital town with water selling for Rs20 a bucket.

Reports of water shortage from other district towns of the hill state have been received with authorities regulating the supply so that at least all residential colonies could get water on a rotational basis. The distribution of water has started in some residential wards since yesterday giving some respite, but hotels and those who reside beside main thoroughfares of the town have been at the mercy of private water vendors. A pair of buckets of water supplied by the vendors costs at least Rs 20 with buyers having no choice about the source. The distribution by tankers in the wards would continue till April 30 subject to extension, PHE secretary Zhaleo Rio said.

A nominal fee of 20 paise a litre will be realised for the water distributed, he said in a notification. The department has said the water was for drinking and cooking and under no circumstance will a tanker of water be sold to any individual or party, such as hotels and restaurants.

The dwellers in surrounding villagers have also complained that most streams on hills are slowly drying up since the state experienced less rainfall during monsoon and there was hardly any rain since November. Since water scarcity during the winter (December-April) is a reality in Nagaland, the state government has encouraged people to take up rain water harvesting in their residences to cover the lean period as the state receives high rainfall during monsoon. Most buildings under various departments that came up in past few years have rain water harvesting facilities on roof tops.

Source: PTI, 12 March, 2010.

Tuesday, March 9, 2010

CAG criticises Assam govt failing to provide water

Guwahati, Mar 9 (PTI) Assam government has come in for flak from the Comptroller and Auditor General (CAG) of India for failing to provide drinking water to towns under urban water supply projects despite the perennial Brahmaputra river flowing through the state.

None of the 87 towns, declared urban localities as per the 2001 census, out of the total 125 towns in the state get adequate water supply, the CAG said adding that only eight towns have been partially covered under the water supply scheme. In the rest, the scheme is yet to be implemented.

As per norms, a state level committee (SLC) is to be formed for considering the detailed projects reports (DPR) but audit scrutiny revealed that the SLC was not formed and therefore all the projects were selected without its approval.