Friday 13 May 2016

DNC Indoor Badminton Hall to be open on Saturday 14th May






NAGPUR: Badminton players and enthusiasts will get another venue to hone their skills as the state-of-the-art Dhanwate National College (DNC) Indoor Stadium gets open for public here on Saturday.

With increasing number of shuttlers in the city, having another hall is certainly a welcome news for all the badminton lovers. The hall, which is consisted of four wooden courts, gallery, changing rooms and spacious toilets is ready for use.

The opening of the hall will be done with a tournament -- Panjabrao Deshmukh District Sub-Junior and Junior Badminton meet -- which will be organized by the DNC in association with the Nagpur District Badminton Association.

The man behind the new structure, Baban Taywade, is a happy man on Thursday when he showed the latest facility to the media persons of the city.

"Around Rs 3 cores were spent to build this new stadium. The construction lasted for nearly four years. Besides badminton, indoor hall will have facilities for table tennis, chess, gymnasium and yoga. The spectators' gallery with a capacity to sit around 300 people have been made," said DNC principal Taywade.

He added that the University Grant Commission (UGC) has given the grant of Rs 70 lakh and Rs 50 lakh have been received from former Union minister Vilas Mutemwar's MP funds. "We got help from UGC and Muttemwar. The remaining amount was spent by Amravati-based Shivaji Education Society," said Taywade.

Muttemwar will inaugurate the hall and district badminton tourney at 9 am on Saturday. President of Shivaji Education Society Arun Shelke will preside over the function. Guardian minister Chandrashekhar Bawankule, mayor Pravin Datke, MLA Sunil Kedar, former NIT trustee Anant Gharad, MBA president Arun Lakhani and other dignitaries will be the guests of honour.

This New is Originally Posted on Time OF India

Wednesday 4 May 2016

The Value of Thirst



As the country grapples with poor water management, polluted water bodies, shortage of drinking water and water-borne diseases, businesses and entrepreneurs are coming up with unique solutions to quench the thirst of the people. Business Today profiles a few promising initiatives that could prove to be game-changers.



 
Nagpur was no different from the rest of India when it came to water mismanagement. "These inefficiencies clubbed with low tariff made the urban water distribution unsustainable," says Arun Lakhani, Chairman, Vishvaraj Infrastructure. So, when Nagpur Municipal Corporation issued tenders for 24x7 water supply in the city and another project at Bhandewadi for water reuse, Lakhani bid for both projects. For the Rs 550-crore 24x7 water supply project the company is supposed to provide continuous water supply to every household, improve the technical and commercial efficiency of the system, lay 2,100 km of pipelines, set up a water treatment facility and storage reservoirs, apart from providing 325,000 new house service connections. It is also responsible for metering, billing and collection of charges. "We carried out our hydraulic modelling of the city and, now, all households in Nagpur are getting at least three to four hours of daily water supply."

PIRAMALSARVAJAL

 In a country where 125 million people do not have access to drinking water, Sarvajal's ATMs cater to 300,000 people every day at 30 paisa per litre of potable water. Since its launch in 2009, the company has installed over 180 water units across 13 states. "All one has to do is swipe the prepaid card and key in the amount required, and the machine dispenses the water. The Sarvajal server keeps a record of user transactions and deducts the amount used on the card," says Vasu Padmanabhan, CEO, Piramal Sarvajal. The company has got into partnerships with local entrepreneurs, panchayats and community-based organisations to run the water treatment plants. "Local community members are selected and trained to manage the purification units. The projects are also monitored remotely on a daily basis to ensure production and purity, and understand the consumption pattern for remedial action," he adds. The ATM units cost Rs 5 lakh to Rs 10 lakh, and the local partners can also earn up to Rs 35,000 per month. The plant works on reverse osmosis and UV-based filtration technology.

WATERLIFE INDIA 

Sudesh Menon, who was tipped to take over as the South East Asia head of GE, quit the company to later launch Waterlife India in partnership with two former colleagues - Mohan Ranbaore and Indranil Das - in 2009. So far, the Hyderabad-based company has installed over 4,000 water purification plants to quench the thirst of over 12 million people across 15 states. Waterlife focuses on community water systems in villages and urban slums, and works in collaboration with governments, local bodies and corporate houses. Menon says that sustainability is key while providing high quality water over the long-term (five to 15 years), compared to systems that go defunct after the first year "due to poor maintenance or apathy". A Waterlife team first visits the village to map its drinking water requirements, analyses the viability and tests sources of water for contamination. Based on the findings, a customised plant is built. It costs anything between Rs 5 lakh and Rs 25 lakh. Operators are hired to operate and maintain the plant after rigorous training. "We expect to maintain revenue growth of 30-40 per cent per annum over the next five years," says Menon, adding that the World Bank's recognition of Waterlife as one of the pioneers in the provision of safe water in the bottom-of-the-pyramid market was a rewarding experience.

KENT RO

When Mahesh Gupta failed to get a quality water purifier for his children diagnosed with jaundice, he decided to make one himself. "Purifiers primarily work on the Ultra Violet principle, wherein the water passes through UV rays and the bacteria are killed in the process. For me, that was not enough because industrial activity has resulted in contaminated ground water, and impurities such as arsenic, rust, pesticides and fluorides," says Gupta, Chairman, KENT RO Systems. After several trials, he zeroed in on the reverse osmosis (RO) technology and the first KENT purifier was launched in March 1999 from his garage in South Delhi. In the first year he sold around 100 units for Rs 20,000 a piece, compared to the Rs 5,000 price tag of other available water purifiers in the market. Gupta claims, KENT RO now enjoys 40 per cent share of the RO market and is looking at Rs 1,000-crore turnover in 2016/17.

This New is Originally Posted on BusinessToday

Tuesday 26 April 2016

EU thumbs up to Pune firm's effective management plan




Arun Lakhani, CMD, Vishvaraj Infrastructure Ltd


PUNE: A city-based organisation's water management plan is among the four projects selected by the Centre and the European Union (EU) for study and implementation.


The city recently hosted a three-day international conference on 'Water Management & Waste Water Treatment'. The participants deliberated on acute water shortage and water management issues and delved on workable technologies for sewage treatment. The conference was arranged by the National Environmental Engineering Research Institute (NEERI) of the Council of Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR), Ecosan, and supported by the Department of Science and Technology (DST), Government of India, and the EU.


City-based EcoSan Services Foundation's water management plan, 'NaWaTech', is one of the four projects selected. The project was showcased at Yashada last week.

The projects that were showcased at the conference were selected under the framework of the India-European Union Science & Technology research and innovation project in water technology and management.


"With more people migrating to cities, water resources are dwindling. It has become mandatory to go for waste water treatment. We have to look at shifting from the conventional approach," said Girish Bapat, the city's guardian minister.


"India pumps out almost 80% sewage of the total water supplied. We can treat 60% of this. This water can be used for construction, gardening, etc," said Arun Lakhani, managing director of Vishvaraj Infrastructure, India, which has implemented the 24x7 water scheme in Nagpur using a public private partnership model.


The four projects NaWaTech, Eco India, Swings and Saraswati focus on various water treatment and management technologies developed and implemented by research institutes. The projects are jointly funded by DST-GOI and the European Commission. They were selected on the basis of minimum maintenance, low energy consumption, large scope to scale up and cost effectiveness.


"For the projects, Rs 16mn funding has been provided by DST and EU. Both Indian and European consortiums will work on these projects to assess and enhance the potential of natural and technical water treatment systems to suit local conditions," said Arvind Kumar, scientist-E of the International Multilateral and Regional Cooperation department, in DST-GOI.


NaWaTech is a three-year collaborative project. It works under a consortium of seven European organizations and seven Indian members, which includes the Pune Municipal Corporation (PMC). "NaWaTech is based on optimized use of surface water supply, rain water, storm water as well as grey water," said DB Panse, director Ecosan Services Foundation.



Mangesh Dighe, head of environment cell of PMC, said, "One system has been installed at the Maharashtra Jeevan Pradhikaran office in Pune. The water will supplied to Indradhanushya centre, Sachin Tendulkar Park and a public toilet near Ambil odha."



This News is Originally Posted on TIME OF INDIA

Monday 25 April 2016

Pune firm’s water management plan gets a thumbs up



Arun Lakhani, CMD, Vishvaraj Infrastructure Ltd

Pune: A city-based organisation's water management plan is among the four projects selected by the Centre and the European Union (EU) for study and implementation.


The city is hosting a three-day international conference on 'Water Management & Waste Water Treatment' will address acute water shortage and water management issues and delve on workable technologies for sewage treatment. The conference is organized by the National Environmental Engineering Research Institute (NEERI) of the Council of Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR), Ecosan, and supported by the Department of Science and Technology (DST), Government of India, and the EU.


City-based EcoSan Services Foundation's water management plan, 'NaWaTech', is one of the four projects selected by the Department of Science and Technology (DST), Government of India and EU. The project was showcased at Yashada on Thursday, the first day of the international conference.


The four projects that were showcased at the conference were selected under the framework of the India-European Union Science & Technology research and innovation project in water technology and management.


"With more people migrating to cities, water resources are dwindling. Hence, It has become mandatory to go for waste water treatment as the situation will only worsen. We have to look at shifting from the conventional approach. Research and innovation should be our constant endeavour," said Girish Bapat, the city's guardian minister of Pune.





"India pumps out almost 80% sewage out of the total water supplied. We can treat at least 60% of this. This water can be used for construction, gardening, etc," said Arun Lakhani, chairman and managing director of Vishvaraj Infrastructure, India, which has implemented the 24x7 water scheme in Nagpur using a public private partnership model.


The four projects showcased are NaWaTech, Eco India, Swings and Saraswati. They focus on various water treatment and management technologies developed and implemented by various research institutes. The projects are jointly funded by both DST-GOI and the European Commission. They were selected on the basis of minimum maintenance, low energy consumption, large scope to scale up and cost effectiveness.

"For the water-based projects, Rs 16mn funding has been provided jointly by DST and EU. Both the Indian and European consortiums will work jointly on these projects to assess and enhance the potential of natural and technical water treatment systems to suit local conditions," said Arvind Kumar, scientist-E of the International Multilateral and Regional Cooperation department, in DST-GOI.


NaWaTech, which stands for Natural Water Systems and Treatment Technologies, is a three-year collaborative project. It works under a consortium of seven European organizations and universities and seven Indian members, headed by NEERI which also includes the Pune Municipal Corporation (PMC). "NaWaTech is based on optimized use of surface water supply, rain water, storm water as well as grey water," said DB Panse, director Ecosan Services Foundation.


As per Panse added, NaWaTech's largest project has been implemented at the College of Engineering Pune campus. The second site where NaWaTech has been implemented is the 400-acre towship, Amanora Park Town.


Mangesh Dighe, head of environment cell head of PMC, said, "One such system has been installed at the Maharashtra Jeevan Pradhikaran office in Pune. The water will supplied to the Indradhanushya centre, Sachin Tendulkar Park and a public toilet near Ambil odha." He also said that the PMC environment cell with the garden department will visit areas of the city to see which river, nullah and lake can be tapped for wastewater treatment project.




This News is Originally Posted on TIME OF INDIA