IPL matches in City under NGT scanner
National Green Tribunal has asked Karnataka State Cricket Association and other State authorities concerned to furnish details of water being used at the M Chinnaswamy Stadium during the IPL matches
PTI
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Three matches have already been held at the venue, and it has been estimated that each of those games received 75,000 litres of treated water
BENGALURU,
5 APRIL
Amidst the worsening water crisis in the City, the National Green
Tribunal (NGT) has asked the Karnataka State Cricket Association and other
State authorities concerned to furnish details of water being used at the M
Chinnaswamy Stadium during the IPL matches here.
Apart from State Cricket Association, NGT has also asked the
Bengaluru Water Supply and Sewerage Board (BWSSB) and Karnataka State Pollution
Control Board (KSPCB) to submit the particulars about the quantity and source
of the water by 2 May.
"We are studying the notice, and as such the stadium complies
with the NGT norms. So, we are confident of going ahead with the matches,"
said Karnataka State Cricket Association (KSCA) CEO Shubendu Ghosh. The
Tribunal has taken suo motu cognizance after reports emerged that the
Chinnaswamy Stadium has been getting treated water supply for IPL matches.
NGT chairperson Justice Prakash Shrivastava and A Senthil Vel
(expert member) registered the case. Three matches have already been held at
the venue, and it has been estimated that each of those games received 75,000
litres of treated water.
The stadium is scheduled to hold four more IPL matches on 15 April
(vs Sunrisers Hyderabad), 4 May (vs Gujarat Titans), 12 May (vs Delhi Capitals)
and 18 May (vs Chennai Super Kings). "We may require around 15000 litres
of water for match purposes and it can be generated from the in-house STP
plant," Ghosh had said earlier.
However, the NGT took note of the claims that BWSSB has permitted
the supply of treated water to the stadium upon the request of KSCA,
particularly from the nearby Cubbon Park area. But the KSCA officials had
maintained that they were not using either groundwater or potable water for
purposes like watering the pitch or outfield.
The Karnataka government has imposed a strict ban on using potable
water for miscellaneous purposes such as gardening and washing vehicles, among
others.
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