Water crisis to end as Haryana resumes supply
Under the circumstances, certain areas that come under the distribution network of these plants remained affected through the day.
New Delhi: The supply of water to the national capital is expected to normalise by Thursday as Haryana has started “releasing” Delhi’s share of Yamuna water, Delhi chief minister Arvind Kejriwal said.
“Haryana has started releasing water. Production likely to be normal by Thursday morning and distribution by Thursday evening. We are constantly monitoring situation,” Mr Kejriwal tweeted.
Delhi Jal Board (DJB) CEO Keshav Chandra expressed hope that production at the treatment plants — Wazirabad and Chandrawal — will “stabilise” by Thursday and supply will gradually improve.
“Water distribution will take one more day to normalise. Hopefully by tonight Wazirabad pond level would be restored and production will stabilise from Thursday. Distribution will take one more day to normalise because after production all the underground reservoirs and all the lines are to be filled up,” Mr Chandra said.
Two water treatment plants — Wazirabad and Chandrawal, which treat around 220 MGD (million gallons per day) out of the 900 MGD treated in Delhi — were down to 60 per cent of their capacity as the city was receiving around 80 MGD (million gallons per day) less than its share.
Under the circumstances, certain areas that come under the distribution network of these plants remained affected through the day. Out of the 900 MGD, around 550 (almost 60 per cent) comes from Haryana and the rest from Uttar Pradesh.
Late on Tuesday evening, deputy chief minister Manish Sisodia had tweeted that the Haryana chief secretary has “assured” the city government that water supply in Yamuna would be “back to normal” by Wednesday afternoon.
Earlier in the day, Mr Sisodia had threatened to move court against Haryana for “withholding” Delhi’s legal share of water and had also sought the intervention of the Prime Minister’s Office (PMO).
The Lutyens’ Bungalow Zone, which comes under the New Delhi Municipal Council, and houses the PMO, the Rashtrapati Bhavan and residences of several Union ministers, judges, Army officers and bureaucrats, among others, was affected by the shortage.
Almost every summer, Delhi and Haryana spar over water-sharing with each claiming that the other’s demand exceeds the stipulated quantity.