A fishing village on East Coast Road finds itself stuck between a rock and a hard place, as development comes in the form of desalination plants; and the Villagers claim the promises made to them have not been kept
Large beach bungalows dot the landscape at Suleri Kattukuppam on Chennai's East Coast Road. A big green bungalow juts further out than its fellows, intruding on to the sandy beach fringing the Bay of Bengal. By way of contrast, the building abutting this bungalow, once someone's home, now stands bruised, battered, and broken by the serial assaults of the ocean.
At the other end of this little enclave, protected by compound walls that tower over the matchbox sized houses built by the Rotary Club for the villagers after the 2004 tsunami, stand the two large green tanks that are visible markers of the Nemmeli desalination plant.
The Nemmeli plant is intended to convert sea water into potable water sufficient to meet the requirements of an estimated 10 lakh people in Chennai, at a cost of about 230 per kilolitre.
"This plant has only ruined our lives," says M. Anand, a 38 year old fisherman, a pair of shorts peeping out from under his lungi. He holds out a welcoming glass of water, and hastens to add: "This water is not from the plant:' He says this, standing in the shadow of the desalination plant, and seemingly unconscious of the irony. "We buy our drinking water from the nearby village:'
It's quite evident that they have to buy water, as a glass of water drawn from the bore well in his home, located close to the plant, is hard, saline, and undrinkable. "We can use this only to wash clothes and vessels," he says. "Before this plant came up here, the groundwater here used to taste like tender coconut water, it was so sweet," interjects Palani, a 50 year old native.
Standing their ground
Bu hikaye The Hindu dergisinin October 07, 2018 sayısından alınmıştır.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Giriş Yap
Bu hikaye The Hindu dergisinin October 07, 2018 sayısından alınmıştır.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Giriş Yap
‘Olympics Cancellation Likely If Vaccine Not Found In Time'
Further delays impossible, says Tokyo Games organising panel chief Mori
It's Wholesale Only At Koyambedu Market
Retail outlets to remain shut to bring down crowding.
Ministry Does U-Turn On Plasma Therapy
Treatment not proven: Health official
Trump's Bleach Statements Echo Claims By Pseudo-Scientists
‘Miracle cure’ quacks have long promoted industrial bleach to treat autism, malaria and many other medical conditions
U.S. May Seek Damages From China
President says many options on the table to hold Beijing accountable, draws an angry response
Koyambedu Market May Be Shifted Out
Decision likely at today's meeting of stakeholders; aim is to enforce physical distancing
Massive Spike Of 522 Cases In Maharashtra
On Monday, cumulative tally surged to 8,590 positive cases with 27 more deaths
The Script Of Disruption And A New Order
Across the globe, the geopolitical and geo-economic fallout of the COVID-19 pandemic could be serious
A Policy Road Map To Tackle Covid-19
The interest of each and the interests of all now coincide, not only within nations but for all humanity
ICMR Says No Payment Made For Chinese Test Kits Supplies
Alleged profiteering by distributors supplying the kits