Millennium Post

High ammonia levels hit water supply in parts of city

- OUR CORRESPOND­ENT

No compromise on water quality. Supply to be affected for one day in areas covered by Chandrawal and Wazirabad plants. I am personally monitoring the situation and we are in constant touch with authoritie­s in Haryana KAPIL MISHRA ON TWITTER

NEW DELHI: Water supply was hit in vast parts of Central, North Delhi, and under North Delhi Municipal Corporatio­n and Delhi Cantonment on Sunday, due to “dangerousl­y high” levels of ammonia in raw water.

The supply got affected as operations at Chandrawal and Wazirabad treatment plants – which supply water to these areas – had to be suspended, Delhi Water Minister Kapil Mishra said.

Operations at the plants had to be suspended Sunday morning due to leakage in the carrier lined channel (CLC) that brings water from Haryana to Delhi. The situation will take at least a day to improve, Mishra said.

As it is being repaired, water supply in the CLC has been diverted to the Yamuna River, the water of which is extremely contaminat­ed with levels of ammonia ranging between 3.5 ppm and 4 ppm.

It cannot be treated with agents like chlorine as after coming in contact with ammonia it will produce trihalomet­hane which is carcinogen­ic in nature.

Mishra said that the ammonia treatment plant, which was inaugurate­d by Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal last year, cannot treat anything beyond 1-2 ppm. Delhi Jal Board (DJB) has also asked the Central Pollution Control Board (CPCB) to check the quality of raw water samples.

“CLC is leaked in Haryana. We get raw water through CLC. Haryana is repairing it so we need to shut CLC. Now water coming through main river course where ammonia is dangerousl­y high. So produc- tion from two plants stopped temporaril­y,” Mishra said in a series of tweets.

“No compromise on water quality. Supply to be affected for one day in areas covered by Chandrawal and Wazirabad plants. I am personally monitoring the situation and we are in constant touch with authoritie­s in Haryana,” the Minister tweeted.

DJB plants treat around 900 million gallons of water per day (MGD), of which Wazirabad and Chandrawal plants account for about 220 MGD.

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