The Herald (South Africa)

Bizarre plan to cover dam backfires

-

AN Indian politician who attempted to cover a dam in sheets of polystyren­e has been left redfaced after his bizarre water-saving scheme backfired.

Tamil Nadu state minister Sellur K Raju waded into the dam with dozens of sheets of polystyren­e, convinced they could help reduce water evaporatio­n in the drought-stricken state.

But the noble yet puzzling effort went belly-up almost immediatel­y as strong winds lifted the lightweigh­t sheets into the air, tossing them across the surface of the water.

Footage of the incident showed officials in rowing boats pursuing the airborne sheets, while others used rocks to try and keep them in place.

Elsewhere broken chunks of the white polymer plastic, stuck together with coloured tape, were seen washed up on the dam banks.

The minister defended the harebraine­d scheme, which reportedly cost one million rupees (R200 000), saying he had been told thermocol technology could reduce water evaporatio­n.

Images of the minister flailing waist-deep in water with the unwieldy sheets attracted widespread scorn on social media, where Indians blasted the botched experiment as a waste of public money.

“Instead of using thermocol sheets to cover the entire dam, how about using a huge tarpaulin sheet to cover the sun. Problem solved,” one Twitter user wrote sarcastica­lly.

The dam on the Vaigai river is a key water source for many in the southern state, where irregular rainfall has caused a prolonged drought in many parts.

Farmers desperate for relief have been resorting to extreme acts of protest to draw attention to the crisis, including wearing necklaces of human skulls, carrying live rats in their mouths and running about naked in front of Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s office. – AFP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa