Train with 25 lakh litres of water reaches parched Chennai

Jolarpettai | ByReuters
Updated on: Jul 12, 2019 12:43 pm IST

Technicians in the railway station at Jolarpettai, located over 135 miles (217 km) from Chennai, worked from early on Thursday to fill fifty wagons with 50,000 litres of water each, sourced from a south Indian river.

Indian authorities on Thursday filled tanks with water and loaded them onto a train in Tamil Nadu to supply its manufacturing capital Chennai where reservoirs have run dry.

The first train carrying water from Jolarpet railway station in Vellore district reaches Chennai.(ANI Photo)
The first train carrying water from Jolarpet railway station in Vellore district reaches Chennai.(ANI Photo)

Technicians in the railway station at Jolarpettai, located over 135 miles (217 km) from Chennai, worked from early on Thursday to fill fifty wagons with 50,000 litres of water each, sourced from a south Indian river.

The unusual water train will provide much needed relief to the carmaking centre dubbed “India’s Detroit.”

The shortage has forced some schools to shut, companies to ask employees to work from home, and hotels to ration water for guests.

Also Read | Farms flounder in bone dry Tamil Nadu

Bad water management and lack of rainfall mean all four reservoirs that supply Chennai have run virtually dry this summer. Other Indian cities, including the capital New Delhi and technology hub Bengaluru, are also grappling with water shortages.

The train was supposed to reach Chennai on Thursday, but leakages in valves connecting the tank to the railway station forced authorites to push back plans by a day, officials at the railway station said.

People living on the outskirts are blocking roads and laying siege to tanker lorries because they fear their water reserves are being sacrificed so city dwellers, businesses and luxury hotels do not run out.

Also Read | Worsening drought in Chennai is forcing doctors to buy water for surgery

Ground water levels in Chennai and in regions around the city have been falling due to lack of rainfall. Like many Indian cities, Chennai’s growth over the past 20 years has been rapid and haphazard.

(This story has been published from a wire agency feed without modifications to the text. Only the headline has been changed.)

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