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India to serve as hub for imported US water Read more: India to serve as hub for imp

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HOUSTON: In a commercial scheme that attempts to rectify some of the inequalities inflicted by the beginnings of climate change, water from a lake in Alaska will be sent to a new, yet-to-be-built water hub in Mumbai and then exported to arid cities in the Middle East.

A San Antonio, Texas, based company has announced plans to export 12 billion gallons of water per year from the Blue Lake Reservoir in Sitka, Alaska, to a new, yet-to-be-built water hub on the west coast of India.

There's trillions of litres of water in a three mile-long reservoir near a town called Sitka in the archipelago off the western coast of Canada.

It's named Blue Lake, and fewer than 9,000 people live nearby, meaning that there's very little local pressure on the water supply.

The water in the lake is pure enough to drink without any treatment, and a local bottling business has for some time siphoned small quantities out for thirsty people around North America.

But a new deal with Texas company S2C Global Systems could see far greater amounts extracted for a much larger-scale operation.

S2C's plan is to siphon off 10.9 billion litres of water -- enough to meet the needs of a city of 500,000 -- each year from the reservoir, which then be pumped into a tanker and sent to a port south of Mumbai on the west coast of India.

There, it'll be bottled and distributed around the region for profit, including to a port in Iraq.

For security reasons, the company did not disclose the port, however this first hub will include a berth for a Suezmax vessel, an offloading system to a dedicated tank farm and a distribution complex for packaged water.

Within 18 months after that we will be able to switch to a very large class vessel (302,833 cubic meters/80 Million USG), as both the ship and the berth for her will be completed within this time frame.

The company will be able to sell from its hub bulk fresh water by way of smaller ships that can deliver to shallower ports, like Umm Qasr in Iraq (located within 4 days of India's west coast).

S2C will also sell fresh water in 20-foot containers with flexi-tanks (4623 USG) suitable for pharmaceutical/high tech manufacturing and packaged water (18.9 and 10L) for the consumer markets anywhere containers are delivered in south and west Asia from India.

Alaskan mountain water is so pure it requires no treatment except to remove organics that might be present through the natural cycle.

During its 30 day voyage from Alaska to the Arabian Sea we will protect the water using an "Ozonating" system in the ships holds.

"S2C Global has an exciting future in India and the region", Rod Bartlett, managing partner of Alaska Resource Management and president of S2C Global Systems, USA said.

Read more: India to serve as hub for imported US water - The Times of India India to serve as hub for imported US water - The Times of India
 
DMRC finally cleared for Kerala's Light Metro project | Zee News

Last Updated: Wednesday, September 9, 2015 - 15:16
Thiruvananthapuram: The Kerala government has cleared the Delhi Metro Rail Corporation (DMRC) as the implementing agency and given administrative sanction for the proposed Light Metro project in Kozhikode and the state capital, Chief Minister Oommen Chandy said on Wednesday.


Speaking to reporters, Chandy said all issues over the project has been cleared and the state government will now write a fresh letter to the central government seeking the in-principle clearance for the project.

"The previous letter to the central government did not have clarity but now with the administrative sanction also given by the cabinet, all issues have been cleared, including handing over the project to be overseen by the DMRC," said Chandy.

The project is expected to ease the traffic in the busy capital city and Kozhikode.

'Metro Man' E Sreedharan, advisor to DMRC, would be overseeing the project and 40 percent of the cost is expected to be shared equally by the state and the central government and the rest through loans from the Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA) with very low rates of interests.

Initially, Sreedharan had suggested for Mono Rail projects in these two cities and after starting the preliminary paper work for it, it was cancelled after doubts were raised about the financial viability.

He later suggested the Light Metro mode and it ran into problems after a section of the bureaucracy appeared not very keen and it was only after numerous rounds of talks and a huge pressure from various political parties backing Sreedharan, the project got its final nod.

IANS
 
There is a method to make pure water out of thin air through condensation, the carbon footprint of importing water from Alaska to Middle East, via India will be massive. Or they can sanction several desalination plant.
 
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