
Mangaluru, Mar 21,207:  When one of the major consumers of fresh water — Mangalore Refinery and  Petrochemicals Ltd. (MRPL) — is making heightened efforts to curb such  usage, the company is unable to get the required quantity of treated  domestic sewage as an alternative.
At a time when water scarcity  is looming over the coastal city, MRPL is equipped to meet at least half  of its water requirement through treated sewage. It uses approximately  13 million gallons per day (MGD) water — about 9 MGD of fresh water, 3  MGD from the Kavoor Sewage Treatment Plant (STP) and 2 MGD through  internal water recycling. The plant is designed to use about 7 MGD  treated sewage.
On the other hand, though the four STPs in  different parts of the city have an installed capacity to treat about 18  MGD of sewage, only about 5-6 MGD flow through them even as the  Surathkal STP is yet to become operational. There are suspicions that  half of the sewage generated is let into storm-water drains, which once  were fresh water streams. All the 3 MGD treated sewage from Kavoor STP  is lifted by MRPL while another 2 MGD treated sewage from the  Jeppinamogaru plant is let into the Netravathi for want of a pipeline to  Kavoor and 0.21 MGD treated sewage from the Pachchanadi STP is used by  the Pilikula Biological Park. Residents of Mangaluru use an estimated 27  MGD Netravathi water, though about 36 MGD is actually pumped from the  Thumbe vented dam. The remaining 9 MGD is lost either due to theft or  leakage.
Designed to use sewage
MRPL Director (Refinery)  M. Venkatesh told The Hindu that the first two phases of the plant had  been using 6 MGD fresh water. While planning Phase 3 of MRPL, it was so  designed that half of the water requirement of all three phases (about  13 MGD) should be met through treated sewage. Accordingly, MRPL now can  use up to 7 MGD treated domestic sewage. The company also got installed a  skid-mounted reverse osmosis water purifying plant recently as the  treated sewage had high potassium content, particularly during summer.
Mr.  Venkatesh said that MRPL is awaiting completion of a pipeline from  Jeppinamogaru STP to Kavoor STP by Mangalore Special Economic Zone so  that it gets at least 2 MGD more treated sewage.