Friday, August 21, 2015

Article Syed Haider Ali - This is totally copy paste

  This is totally copy paste, I am just citing two paragraphs. All remaining is also copy paste. See ur topic and what u have copy pasted.. Both are totally different.  
Article Syed Haider Ali Roll No131
Dirty water plants supplies striking on Citizens
 
 
 Hyderabad, the second biggest city of the province, residents of Hyderabad were being supplied unfiltered, raw water, causing several problems and extra load on Sindh Health Department's annual budget.  

http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/sindh/13-Jan-2014/health-and-sanitation-sindh-leads-with-highest-diarrhoea-cases-child-mortality  

Ali Mohammed Mahar, (who is this gentleman?) said that figures detailing the number of people who had died or who had been made sick were only available from government run hospitals. "Nobody knows about the fate of those patients who were admitted in private hospitals or who were treated at home," he said. 

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/3745165.stm 

Mr Mahar has visited some of the hospitals treating the sick and pledged to double the amount of compensation paid to the families of the dead. He described the poisoning as "an epidemic".
"Most of patients brought to Liaquat medical college hospital suffered from dehydration," said Medical Superintendent Hadi Bux Jatoi. "We treated them promptly thus they were saved." The water poisoning began earlier this month when polluted water was discharged from the lake.
"Last year, after the increased number of diarrhea cases, a team of our department visited the filter plant in Hyderabad; I was part of the team, that discovered Hyderabad filter plant has been out of order for many years and the citizens are being supplied unfiltered raw water, without even chlorination. Spread of diarrhea in such conditions is not unlikely," he said.
The global leaders in specialty chemicals, Archroma, opened its first sustainable effluent treatment facility in Jamshoro, Pakistan which not only supports the recovery of 80 per cent of water, but in fact allows effluent treatment based on zero liquid discharge, with an investment of 371 million PKR. “At Archroma, we take water scarcity very seriously and therefore are constantly exploring new and environmentally compatible solutions. As a chemical company committed to innovation and performance together with sustainability, Archroma puts a lot of time and engagement in developing chemical solutions that help our customers use less water,” declares Alexander Wessels, CEO, Archroma Group.
Moving on, It is a common scientific research that human body can survive for three weeks without food but in case of water, there is a different story. Water is an essential component of our diet without which we humans are unable to survive for more than three days. This illustrates the worth of water in our lives. But this renewable resource of water is declining and is being polluted ever since the industrialization has begun in full swing.
According to Article 11 and 12 International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights:
"The human right to water entitles everyone to sufficient, safe, acceptable, physically accessible and affordable water for personal and domestic uses"
This confirms that it is the responsibility of government of every state to guarantee the fulfillment of these rights and to ensure the provision of clean drinking water to all citizens. Thus, for the same purpose, CDA has taken initiatives in Islamabad by installing water filtration plants for the availability of clean filtered water to the residents. These filtration plants have, to some extent, reduced the risk of water borne diseases and many other detrimental effects on consumers.
 
While the textile industry is always under constant scrutiny for its water wastage, this facility shows that leading companies are taking steps towards environmental sustainability. The plant is set over an area of 25 acres and consists of flocculation, equalization, surface aeration, clarification, ultra filtration and reverse osmosis to yield colourless water with a COD (chemical oxygen demand) and TDS (total dissolvable solids) of less than 75 ppm
 
 Jamshoro districts are forced to use the water which gets polluted from 25MG sewage the city sewers release into the old and new Phuleli canals apart from the animal excrement the buffalo pens throw into the two canals.

The irrigation authorities seem completely oblivious of the pens and other heavy encroachments on the canals’ banks because they have taken no action against them.
The encroachers too contribute largely to polluting the canals.

The district government is building a sewage treatment plant (abandoned earlier years back) near Isra Hospital and plans to sell the treated water to farmers to meet the plant’s recurring expenses.
Another treatment plant under construction near Sahrish Nagar would be completed next year to treat Qasimabad’s sewage before discharging it into River Indus.
Barring 30MGD new filter plant and 10MGD old filter plant the residents of some units of Latifabad and Hussainabad, Paretabad and Phuleli get settled water with marginal chlorination treatment. Latifabad and Hussainabad receive water from downstream Kotri.
The district is now planning to increase the capacity of new filter plant to 50MGD and is setting up two filter plants of 8MGD each at Hala Naka and Paretabad water works and another 4MGD filter plant at Ganjo Takkar in a bid to shift its entire system from downstream to upstream of River Indus.
Wasa tests the quality of water under 10 parameters despite the fact that WHO has recommended 31 various parameters as an international standard for water to be fit for human consumption.
An EPA study claims that three taluka municipal administrations and Cantonment Board Hyderabad generate 463,500 tons solid waste a year, which comes around 1270 tons waste daily.
Of 463,500 tons of waste, 33,600 tons is lifted annually. Out of 1270 tons waste generated daily, only 920 tons is lifted while 350 tons remains uncollected because of lack of vehicles, budget, proper land filling site and staff

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