Mumbai:
It’s an innovative solution to the water crisis that’s threatening
to cripple Mumbai. What’s more, it isn’t only in the realm of
theory, a few hundred Mumbaikars have already started acting on
it.
Here’s the theory part: If the five million-odd
denizens of this city who live in residential complexes transfer
half their flush tank water into plastic bags or bottles and put
these into the tanks,
hydraulic experts in the city confirm that the city will jointly
end up saving more than half the water that Tansa supplies to the
city daily, and more than Tulsi and Vihar’s per day supply put
together. Additionally, almost two days of the city’s entire water
supply will be saved if this practice is continued for a month.
The BMC supplies water to a slum population of
approximately seven million. The remaining water goes to a
population of over five million people living in residential
complexes, where the average flush capacity is between 7 and 10
litres. Now, assuming a person uses the loo eight times a day,
s/he flushes a minimum
of 56 to 80 litres in 24 hours. Experts, who were civic hydraulic
engineers in the past, say that reducing this usage by half in the
manner mentioned can save a great deal of water: 30-40 litres of
water per household per day, and 150-200 million litres for the
city. At the end of the month, the savings amount to 6,000 mld,
which is almost two days of Mumbai’s water supply.
If certain BMC engineers are to be believed,
hundreds of families in the western suburbs are already practising
the halfflush tank method. Sure, they’re doing it to tide over
their own water crisis, but the city benefits by default.
Aniruddha Ghanekar’s family and their neighbours in Bandra East’s
Gandhinagar have put plastic bags containing over four litres of
water into their 10-litre flush tank. This, Aniruddha, a civil
engineer by profession, says helps them “save half the quantity of
water from the overhead tank they use for flushing for over seven
times a day’’.
A few apartments in Chembur, Goregaon and Andheri,
where Ghanekar’s friends and relatives live, have also followed
suit.
An increasing number of Mumbaikars have been
resorting to this method ever since the water cut came into force.
The BMC’s hydraulic engineers, while lauding the idea which has
been propagated by environmental NGOs for years, refuse to
officially ask people to adopt it. Says Pramod Guhe, one of these
engineers, “It is good that people are at least toying with
several options to save water. Ideally, people should replace
flush tanks with a capacity of 7-10 litres with those of 3-5
litres, which is adequate.’’