C Shivakumar
Chennai:
The desalination plants in Chennai are capital intensive and
expensive and would force Metro Water to rethink on its future finances,
according to Report of the Working Group on Urban and Industrial Water Supply
and Sanitation for 12th Five Year Plan.
“The Tamil Nadu government has committed that it will pay
for the cost difference. But all this does mean that utilities will continue to
have to depend on external funding for their viability,” the report added.
The report said that often city governments bid for more and more expensive pieces of hardware, without any idea of how this investment will be sustained.
Interestingly, the government is currently buying 90 MLD of
water a day from the Minjur desalination plant at an
average cost of Rs 48.66 per KL (4.8 paise per litre of water) for the next 25
years that includes water capacity charges (the cost for the facilities they
have provided) as well as water variables (cost of treatment, manpower and
chemicals).
The second plant at Nemmeli, also of 100 mld, is being built
also by a private company and with a different arrangement. The contract is to
build the plant and to operate it for the next seven years. The water board
will own the plant and capital investment has been paid through Central
subsidy. This will underwrite the costs of
the delivered water—at roughly Rs 20/kl, said the report.
But the big issue is what these two capital-intensive and
expensive plants will do to the sustainability of the city’s water board.
“Chennai MetroWater is an efficient water utility with
balanced books—more than many others. But the high capital and operation and maintenance will require the utility to
rethink its future finances,” the report added.
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