Tag: tap water

  • Tap water a first for this tribal hamlet in Gujarat

    Express News Service

    AHMEDABAD:  For all the vaunted claims of a ‘Gujarat model’, it has taken the state authorities 75 years to bring tapped water to Sada village of Dediapada taluka in Narmada district. And even as the country celebrates Azadi ka Amrit Mahotsav, Sada’s 250 tribal inhabitants, do not have much to cheer: there is no power and no roads lead to it.

    Located on the banks of Karjan river, Sada is accessible by boats. While there is considerable distance between the houses, Karjan river’s high levels of turbidity makes it unfit for consumption. Until recently, the villagers used home remedies to treat the river water by digging 50-metre seepage pits close to the banks.

    Now, however, some Gujarat engineers have worked wonders to provide 24-hour running water to this village with its odd geographical conditions. Water gushed from taps in the 45 households on Sept. 7.

    Gujarat Water Supply and Sewerage Board Superintending Engineer Shashi Vaghela said, “Sada is geographically undulating and has scattered population. There is no road connectivity, no electricity, no cellular network coverage and no means of transportation except by boat. All this posed a huge challenge to provide drinking water infrastructural facility”.

    Vaghela said that the plan was to create a system which is sustainable and can be operated and maintained by the panchayat. “To achieve the goal to supply piped filtered water to each house, we used solar energy for electricity and the Karjan dam reservoir as a sustainable surface water source. This was done by arranging a floating platform to ensure availability of water all through the year,” he said.

    For years, Sada residents depended on water from Karjan dam, said Vasava Fatesing. “Since there is no transportation facility, we are forced to use boats. Besides, there is no hand pump or bore wells in our village,” he said.

    “Many years ago, a hand-bore hand pump was installed and it would provide water for a few months till January end. As the water level in the dam goes down, the hand pump runs dry. So, we used to dig wells on the river banks for drinking water. The scorching summers made life difficult, if not impossible. Now the taps bring clean water to our homes,” Fatesing said.

    For Sada’s womenfolk, fetching water from the river was a tiring chore. “We would often end up consuming muddy water. And in summer, we would walk the one-and-a-half km distance between the river and their homes many times over,” said Surmila. Now, the tap water has proved to be a blessing for Surmila and all the other womenfolk.

    AHMEDABAD:  For all the vaunted claims of a ‘Gujarat model’, it has taken the state authorities 75 years to bring tapped water to Sada village of Dediapada taluka in Narmada district. And even as the country celebrates Azadi ka Amrit Mahotsav, Sada’s 250 tribal inhabitants, do not have much to cheer: there is no power and no roads lead to it.

    Located on the banks of Karjan river, Sada is accessible by boats. While there is considerable distance between the houses, Karjan river’s high levels of turbidity makes it unfit for consumption. Until recently, the villagers used home remedies to treat the river water by digging 50-metre seepage pits close to the banks.

    Now, however, some Gujarat engineers have worked wonders to provide 24-hour running water to this village with its odd geographical conditions. Water gushed from taps in the 45 households on Sept. 7.

    Gujarat Water Supply and Sewerage Board Superintending Engineer Shashi Vaghela said, “Sada is geographically undulating and has scattered population. There is no road connectivity, no electricity, no cellular network coverage and no means of transportation except by boat. All this posed a huge challenge to provide drinking water infrastructural facility”.

    Vaghela said that the plan was to create a system which is sustainable and can be operated and maintained by the panchayat. “To achieve the goal to supply piped filtered water to each house, we used solar energy for electricity and the Karjan dam reservoir as a sustainable surface water source. This was done by arranging a floating platform to ensure availability of water all through the year,” he said.

    For years, Sada residents depended on water from Karjan dam, said Vasava Fatesing. “Since there is no transportation facility, we are forced to use boats. Besides, there is no hand pump or bore wells in our village,” he said.

    “Many years ago, a hand-bore hand pump was installed and it would provide water for a few months till January end. As the water level in the dam goes down, the hand pump runs dry. So, we used to dig wells on the river banks for drinking water. The scorching summers made life difficult, if not impossible. Now the taps bring clean water to our homes,” Fatesing said.

    For Sada’s womenfolk, fetching water from the river was a tiring chore. “We would often end up consuming muddy water. And in summer, we would walk the one-and-a-half km distance between the river and their homes many times over,” said Surmila. Now, the tap water has proved to be a blessing for Surmila and all the other womenfolk.

  • About 7.99 lakh households in Assam have tap water connections, rise of 10 per cent from 2019: Govt

    By PTI
    NEW DELHI: About 7.99 lakh households in Assam have tap water connections, a rise of 10 per cent from 2019, the Jal Shakti Ministry said on Saturday, as it allocated a grant of Rs 5,601.16 crore to the state to expedite the implementation of Jal Jeevan Mission.

    Union Jal Shakti Minister Gajendra Singh Shekhawat, while approving this four-fold increase in allocation, assured full assistance to the state for making provision of tap water supply in every rural home by 2024, the ministry said in a statement.

    The ministry further said that Assam has already approved schemes for 41.9 lakh tap water connections and work orders for about 17.85 lakh connections have been issued in 2021-22.

    With the allocation, the ministry urged the state to expedite the implementation of the Jal Jeevan Mission, the statement said.

    In Assam on August 15, 2019, at the time of launch of the Jal Jeevan Mission, only 1.11 lakh (1.76 per cent) households, out of a total of 63.35 lakh households in 25,335 villages, had tap water supply.

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    In the last 22 months, 6.88 lakh households (10.87 per cent) in the state have been provided tap water connections, thus 7.99 lakh households (12.63 per cent) have tap water supply.

    The state has to provide tap water supply to the remaining 55.35 lakh households in the next three years.

    To achieve this task, Assam has planned to provide connections to 22.63 lakh households in 2021-22, 20.84 lakh households in 2022-23, and 13.20 lakh tap water connections in 2023-24.

    The Jal Shakti Ministry this year allocated a grant of Rs 5,601.16 crore to Assam under the Jal Jeevan Mission, a four fold increase from Rs 1,608.51 crore in 2020-21.

    The Ministry of Jal Shakti has also released Rs 700 crore to the state as the first tranche.

    Shekhawat has written a letter to the Assam chief minister, highlighting the challenges and important aspects related to planning and implementation of the Jal Jeevan Mission in the state.

    In his letter, the Union minister has expressed hope that the state government will make all out efforts to draw and utilize this enhanced allocation to achieve planned activities under the mission to provide tap water connection to every household in rural areas.

    The allocation of the central grant to Assam under the JJM has been enhanced to Rs 5,601.16 crore.

    With this increase in central allocation, unspent balance of Rs 123.78 crore and the state’s matching share of Rs 636.10 crore, Assam has an assured availability of Rs 6,361.04 crore for water supply work in 2021-22.