Bengaluru shows the new way | S2E17 with

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  • čas přidán 28. 05. 2024
  • ***Support the podcast, become a member: / @oorulabs
    On, OoruLabs, India's premier urban issues podcast, Sathya Sankaran, Host of OoruLabs talks to Vishwanath S on the new way of water management that the rest of the cities in India can adopt. Nothing like a crisis to change the approach and try new things.
    The conversation discusses the water situation in Devanalli, a town in Bengaluru, and how wastewater treatment can address water scarcity. The town was dependent on deep bore wells for water, but many were dysfunctional and had high salinity. To address this, treated wastewater from sewage treatment plants is pumped into a lake, which then filters through the earth and recharges the aquifer. The water is then treated and supplied to the town. The conversation highlights the importance of local water sources, the symbiotic relationship between the city and its surroundings, and the potential for scaling up this approach in Bengaluru.
    -
    Keywords
    water scarcity, wastewater treatment, Devanalli, Bengaluru, deep bore wells, salinity, treated wastewater, lake, aquifer, water treatment, sustainability, institutional setup, governance structure, urban water cell, groundwater management, legal framework, common pool resource, Pune Municipal Council, aquifer recharge, water engineering, self-sufficiency
    -
    Takeaways
    Treated wastewater can be used to address water scarcity and provide a sustainable water source.
    Reviving lakes and recharging aquifers with treated wastewater can improve water quality and reduce energy consumption.
    A comprehensive institutional setup and governance structure is needed to manage water resources effectively.
    Groundwater management should be formalized and regulated to ensure sustainability.
    Scaling up this approach can make Bengaluru self-sufficient in water and serve as a model for other cities.
    -
    Sound Bites
    "There is a huge proportion of wastewater treatment that can help address the concerns of water scarcity."
    "The lake recharges the shallow aquifer, which has tremendous potential for storage."
    "Treated wastewater has tremendous potential for reuse, both for industrial and natural applications."
    --
    Timecodes
    00:00 Addressing Water Scarcity and Wastewater Treatment
    07:35 The Potential of Treated Wastewater
    14:09 Building an Institutional Framework for Water Management
    ---
    Stock video and picture credits to various contributors. All rights belong to respective owners.
    Camera and editing by @susheelnair761 and Rahul
    ----
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Komentáře • 49

  • @avinashmm4714
    @avinashmm4714 Před měsícem +17

    In the era of only materialistic videos like how to become rich these type of videos are so refreshing 😊

    • @user-ip1bq4js4g
      @user-ip1bq4js4g Před měsícem

      Pull down all the CRUPPT Kannada people built over the lakes when i was a young boy Banaswadi lake was so big , These HARK THOO SPITTING politicians encroached ,And built fancy homes , These two fools talk talk talk , These open lakes ar encroached stare down the homes AND RECLAIM THE LAKE , BRIBE AND CRUPPUTION BUILDING WITH OUR SURVEY, ABOUT THE WATER, THESE TWO FOOLS TALK TALK TILL THE COW'S COME HOME , 36O LAKES DOWN TO 6O , NOW CRUPPT PEOPLE EAT AND DRINK RUPEES SHAMELESS

    • @user-ip1bq4js4g
      @user-ip1bq4js4g Před měsícem

      Talk talk till the cows come home

  • @sr13Hlv
    @sr13Hlv Před 29 dny +4

    This is #1 idea must be implemented everywhere to combat upcoming water challenges .

  • @sakrokz
    @sakrokz Před 28 dny +1

    Really inspiring, amidst all the bashing that the city gets these days, this work by Vishwanath Sir and his team is really great.

  • @HiteshAdventure
    @HiteshAdventure Před 21 dnem

    Deep respect and thanks for the people coming together to make this happen.

  • @udaypl
    @udaypl Před měsícem +2

    Lovely discussion. As always Vishwanath excels in communicating in vey simple language a difficult and a highly misunderstood subject.

  • @BanibrataDutta
    @BanibrataDutta Před měsícem +3

    Sir, what happens when "development" reaches these areas. The acquifer is being recharged not only by the shallow water store under lake, but fed by rainwater on open land. Once development reaches there, the concrete and metalled roads choke-off the open lands and stop feeding the acquifers. As Bangalore's population increases, the pressure on these surrounding rural areas would increase too.

    • @oorulabs
      @oorulabs  Před měsícem +2

      x.com/chairmanbwssb/status/1784430596573507895

    • @BanibrataDutta
      @BanibrataDutta Před 29 dny +1

      @@oorulabs thank you sir, that sounds like a very good initiative. One can only hope that it'd be implemented in earnest and with all honesty, working closely with neighbourhood RWAs, relevant NGOs etc.

  • @sanjaykini
    @sanjaykini Před měsícem +11

    Why can’t all IT BT companies in Bengaluru adopt 1 lake each , I m sure there are more than 10000 companies which can do these experiment using their 2% profit under their CSR initiatives

    • @ShariqBaig_
      @ShariqBaig_ Před měsícem

      Unfortunately we live in a capitalist world, the corporates will invest only if their is profits for them

    • @vinaykumar-iz1hj
      @vinaykumar-iz1hj Před 29 dny

      Excellent idea

    • @vrsahab6547
      @vrsahab6547 Před 29 dny

      but they want returns lol

    • @oorulabs
      @oorulabs  Před 29 dny +3

      Actually quite a few of lake rejuvenation efforts done by NGO's have been supported by corporates, including this one. Some lake rejunevations are getting tarnished in local politics which puts a spoke in the wheel. We need a concerted effort which is protected from local politics by authorities.

    • @DivineVeda
      @DivineVeda Před 25 dny

      @@oorulabs I heard from the lake development authority, that the government has stopped giving permissions to NGO's for lake rejuvenation

  • @DHINARAJMOHANBML
    @DHINARAJMOHANBML Před měsícem +1

    Amazing content, very informative and detailed. We tried recharging underground with rainwater at our house, but the water didn't percolate through the ground and instead stayed just below the surface. This caused damage to the roads and footpaths. Wish I knew about this earlier.

  • @shivhulikere1768
    @shivhulikere1768 Před měsícem +1

    Nice work. Wishing other lakes in Bangalore and other places should be explored for similar recharge

  • @allinoneig2311
    @allinoneig2311 Před 28 dny +2

    The wastewater treatment by BWSSB in bangalore is good only for cleaning roads and buildings. It's totally unfit for cloth wash, shower, garden, farms let alone for kitchen use. The dozens of lakes which were earlier supplying water had been polluted by builders, some small scale industries with the blessings and guidance of BBMP officers since if these dried up, more real estates may be permitted

    • @HiteshAdventure
      @HiteshAdventure Před 21 dnem

      I think this video is abt, some ppl who stopped complaining and arrived at solutions

  • @haridasification
    @haridasification Před měsícem

    Treated water along with rainwater harvesting is the way to go forward

  • @prasad8956
    @prasad8956 Před měsícem

    Very insightful. Why can't we do the same for the lakes within Bengaluru? However small in number they are post encroachment, local water sources can help us a lot - ecologically and economically.
    It still puzzles me as to why we should pump water 100+ kms far for our city

    • @oorulabs
      @oorulabs  Před 21 dnem

      it puzzled me as well, but over the course of the podcasts I learnt how we don't want to do hard work and take the easy way out even if it costs us more.

  • @pramilapriyadarshini3500
    @pramilapriyadarshini3500 Před měsícem

    Very enlightening discussion👍. Outstanding work done by the team of Vishwanath's👏. I think strict regulations should be introduced for water use in any form.

    • @BanibrataDutta
      @BanibrataDutta Před 24 dny

      Aren't enough regulations there already and the thing missing is honest enforcement ? People seem to be flouting rules with utter impunity in many cases, in spite of regulations being there. One regulation that is sorely needed but missing is perhaps the one around not treating the borewell water as one's personal property to be squandered or consumed as one likes.

    • @oorulabs
      @oorulabs  Před 21 dnem

      One of the solutions in S2E13 was to meter the borewell. You should watch that one too.

  • @alokkadam4416
    @alokkadam4416 Před měsícem +1

    To be able to decommission the deep bore wells in the city and get onto the shallow ones, you first need the overall water table to rise. The problem with cities, vertical ones like Bangalore, is that usage of water per person per square foot of inhabited land is way higher than the recharge capacity of the entire neighborhood. Thereby making the water table drop very fast with the onset of the summers.... The best way IMO is to first make it mandatory to every house and building having bore wells to have a rainwater harvesting and storing capacity mandatory for at least the usage of that building or house for six months. After this you will see a gradual rise in the ground water levels over a period of 5 to 10 years.... Bangalore being on a hill (sort of) needs more deeper lakes around it.... not the ones in the city but the land that is seen flooded thoughout the year on the outskirts , there ponds and lakes must be made to store all that water and let it percolate instead of having it lay around in barren fields and evaporate before it can percolate into the ground. Just my 2 cents from what I have seen there...

  • @rocketmohan
    @rocketmohan Před 14 dny

    @zenrainman, sir why is the Doddabommasandra lake been dead from so many years?

  • @girishth
    @girishth Před měsícem

    Is there plan any plan like this to save Hoskote lake as well which is also very big but continuously being destroyed due to rapid urbanization. Please bring this to his notice

    • @user-ip1bq4js4g
      @user-ip1bq4js4g Před měsícem

      CRUPPT OFFICIALS CRUPPUTION SHAITANS question THEM get answers TALK TALK TILL THE COW'S COME HOME TWO FOOLS

  • @nagendrakamath
    @nagendrakamath Před měsícem

    Can you please share names of fish which are suitable for wells ... so that wells are kept clean

  • @sujaysukumar123
    @sujaysukumar123 Před 29 dny +1

    That turtle is lonely

  • @lynnzhang-kp6dv
    @lynnzhang-kp6dv Před 25 dny

    Hello.Hello.Our factory is specializing in COD reagent ,Total Nitrogen Precast Reagent,Ammonia nitrogen Assay Kit,Water quality detection spectrophotometer.etc.Are there any distributors interested?

  • @bharath2508
    @bharath2508 Před 29 dny

    Simple solution to water crisis,
    Cut the water supply to politicians.
    Let them use water after each and everyone in bangalore has enough water.

  • @Shivakumar-td4cz
    @Shivakumar-td4cz Před 17 dny

    How good is the treated water coming out of HN Valley. Poor villagers being scapegoats of the experiment. Lot of voises heard where people have expressed the side effects like degrading agriculture farm, increase pests and diseases for crops and cases of cancer increasing in the areas around lake. If they do tertiary treatment of water then that water is safe. But it is not te case.

    • @oorulabs
      @oorulabs  Před 17 dny

      There are far more cases of cancer in the city with clean cauvery water.

    • @Shivakumar-td4cz
      @Shivakumar-td4cz Před 17 dny

      @@oorulabs we have seen reports of the bad quality of kc valley water and hn valley water being used to fill up Kolar and chikkaballapur. Even Prof TV Ramachandra from IISc is asking government to do the tertiary treatment of water and fill the lake but not the primary and secondary treatment. They have totally debunked the theory of using filter borewell near the lakes filled with secondary treated water.

    • @oorulabs
      @oorulabs  Před 17 dny

      This is what I got...
      According to a 2019 paper, the Hebbal-Nagawara (H-N) Valley water in Chickballapur district, India, has a biological oxygen demand (BOD) that exceeds the 6mg/lit limit set by BIS. However, other parameters are within acceptable limits, and the water can be used for irrigation and groundwater recharge. The paper also suggests that the water can be used for drinking after proper filtration.
      Also TV Ramachandra has asked BWSSB to send the water in open channels instead of closed ones so aeration and photosynthesis can get rid of toxins. I don't know how much of HN valley channel is closed and how much is open, near the lake it was open. Tertiary treatment will be less relevant if this natural cleaning was employed.
      Do send me the studies of cancer, pest and disease increase from this water that you mention.

  • @Shivakumar-td4cz
    @Shivakumar-td4cz Před 17 dny

    Big false claim

  • @Akandbharat91
    @Akandbharat91 Před měsícem +1

    Benglore IT city (Insanely torchers)
    Auto driver goons
    Public transportation goons
    Huge traffic
    Pro Kannadigas braking english board
    North vs Kannadiga hate
    Water crisis
    Congress government
    Corruption
    Small streets
    Banglore is a nightmare city
    Better to move to Hyderabad for IT or Coimbatore

    • @user-ip1bq4js4g
      @user-ip1bq4js4g Před měsícem

      CRUPPT OFFICIALS CRUPPUTION SHAITANS QUESTION ONLY TO FILL THERE POCKETS , JUST TALK TALK make a special CRUPPUTION FORCE ,NOT TAKE BRIBES AND LOOK THE OTHER WAY

    • @Snoozefor10minutes
      @Snoozefor10minutes Před 28 dny +4

      Andhbhakt hate monger is here, situations of cities in India are similar, no city is examplary

    • @balajik8672
      @balajik8672 Před 22 dny +2

      First of All who told you to come here? Go to your place

    • @Shivakumar-td4cz
      @Shivakumar-td4cz Před 17 dny +1

      All cities will face water shortage in another 2vmonths if the rains are delayed