Mangaluru, Feb 8,2017:  With activists opposing the Yettinahole project all set to launch a  hunger strike on Friday fearing that the project will dry up the  Netravathi, a senior professor of the Indian Institute of Science  (IISc), Bengaluru, has come out with a project to save the river and its  tributaries without abusing them in any manner.
According to  T.G. Sitharam, a senior professor in civil engineering, IISc, flood  water from the Netravathi, between June and September, could be stored  by constructing a reservoir in the Arabian Sea in the city by using  available technology, including constructing breakwater. Later, it could  be utilised for drinking and irrigation purposes. Breakwater technology  had been adopted in Mangaluru earlier to prevent sea erosion.
Speaking  on “Building flood water coastal reservoir in the Arabian Sea” here on  Tuesday, the professor said that more than 120 tmcft of flood water ran  off to the sea every year from the Netravathi. Of that, 10 tmcft or 15  tmcft of water could be stored by building coastal reservoir and the  rest could be let off into the sea as flood water is compulsorily  required for nourishing marine life. It could be built through  public-private-partnership and it might cost between Rs. 3,000 crore and  Rs. 3,500 crore.
He said that Mangaluru required about one tmcft  of water annually for a five lakh population. According to him,  building a small coastal reservoir just to store one tmcft of water was  not viable as it involved pumping of water out from the reservoir during  the rainy season to prevent flooding.
Of the four different  possible schemes for building the reservoir available, constructing one  outside the mouth of the river in the sea was viable, he said.
Prof.  Sitharam, who is also KSIIDC (Karnataka State Industrial and  Infrastructure Development Corporation) chair professor in the area of  energy and mechanical sciences at the IISc, said that the size of the  reservoir could be decided as per the requirement which could also be  extended in stages if more storage space was available.
To a  question, he said that a flexible floating membrane could be fixed to  the breakwater to prevent mixing of salt water with fresh flood water.
He said that he has submitted a proposal to Chief Minister Siddaramaiah.