News

MUMBAI: The BMC has asked Mumbaikars to boil water before drinking as torrential rain led to flooding in the filtration and pumping plants at Bhandup water complex and had to be shut down on ...
BMC has imposed a 5% water cut across the city till April 24 for maintenance work at the Bhandup Water Treatment plant. Get the latest updates on the water supply situation in the city.
Mumbai's largest treatment plant, which treats raw water from four dams before supplying it to citizens’ homes, has not been upgraded even once in 30 years.
This 8.48-km-long tunnel, with a diameter of 2.7 metres, will transport treated sewage to the Bhandup water treatment plant. The tunnel will be dug 145 to 150 metres underground.
Mumbai News: BMC Initiates ₹2,000 Cr Project for New Water Treatment Plant in Bhandup Complex The BMC supplies 3,900 MLD of water to the city, which is purified at the filtration plants at ...
There are two water treatment plants in the Bhandup complex. The old plant has a treatment capacity of 1,910 million litres (ML), while the new plant commissioned in 2014 has a treatment capacity ...
Mumbai: The solar power system to be installed at the Bhandup water treatment complex will produce 1.75 lakh units of energy, which will save 33 per cent of the plant’s energy demand annually ...
At a time when the water treatment industry is facing some financial challenges, ENR takes a look at the 10 largest drinking-water treatment facilities in the world.
A malfunction in a valve of the Vaitarna Water Pipeline in Thane is causing a 5% to 10% water cut across Mumbai on October 17-18. The breakdown reduces flow to the Bhandup Water Treatment Plant ...
The water to Mumbai and suburbs comes from the Bhandup water treatment plant (WTP), which runs through a water tunnel underground passing through Thane. An illegal borewell dug in Thane has ...
The water released from the dams is continuously monitored from the health point of view at Bhandup Water treatment plant and then only discharged.” ...
This 8.48-km-long tunnel, with a diameter of 2.7 metres, will transport treated sewage to the Bhandup water treatment plant. The tunnel will be dug 145 to 150 metres underground.