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Water is for people... water is costlier than gold... Industry not worry about water... they think about money... one day money ....not help them..... Food is most important than cloth.
Monday, December 24, 2012
Wednesday, December 12, 2012
With effluent treatment in place, knitwear industry hopes for revival
The
knitwear cluster of Tirupur is set for a revival as production units
are close to ensuring zero liquid discharge (ZLD) from their effluent
treatment plants, as demanded by the Madras high court.According to the Dyers Association of Tirupur, 16 out of the 18 Common
Effluent Treatment Plants (CETP) are now engaged in the process and the
remaining two are expected to commence trial runs some time in
December. Two treatment plants are now functioning at 70% of capacity
while another one is presently operating at 40% with zero liquid
discharge. "We are upgrading the common effluent treatment plants with
the help of the government and are enhancing the capacity of the common
effluent treatment plants in the cluster," said S Nagarajan, president,
Dyers Association of Tirupur (DAT).
The Madras high court had come down heavily on the knitwear cluster
for upsetting the ecological balance of the region by releasing
untreated chemical effluents into Noyyal river and its tributaries
since January 2011. The court ordered the state administration to close
down more than 700 dyeing and bleaching units in the region until
measures were put in place to ensure ZLD from the treatment plants. At
the moment CETPs at Arulpuram, which has 15 units connected to it, are
functioning at 70% of its total operation capacity. "Our total capacity
is to treat 55 lakh litre daily and now we are treating 38 lakh litre
and will further upgrade the facility as we expect to achieve total ZLD
within the next three months," said S Selvakumar, managing director,
Arulpuram CETP, Tirupur.
Similarly, the Park CETP in Tirupur is
presently operating at 70% capacity and the treatment plant at
Veerapandi is operating at 40% capacity. The state government had also
announced financial aid amounting to Rs 179 crore for the cluster
owners to upgrade equipment and machinery at the treatment plants. Work
towards that is underway in the district. "Mangalam CETP has approached
us to start trial run and one more at S Periapalayam is also expected
to follow suit. The units that are presently running at 70% will be
allowed to go to the next stage after they upgrade their machinery and
reverse osmosis reject treatment facility," said R Kannan, district
environmental engineer, Tamil Nadu Pollution Control Board, Tirupur.
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