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Maharashtra Water Supply and Sewerage Board (MWSSB) came into existence in 1976 as per MWSSB Act 1976. It was renamed as Maharashtra Jeevan Pradhikaran (MJP) in 1997. [1] MJP is responsible for providing water supply scheme to each and every town of Maharashtra excluding Mumbai. [2] [3]
The Municipal Commissioner is appointed by Government of Maharashtra under section 54 of Mumbai Municipal Corporation Act, 1888. The Municipal Commissioner is responsible for developing & maintaining civic infrastructure of the city like water supply, roads, storm water, drainage and efficient delivery of various services to the citizens of Mumbai.
It looks for the supply of water to the household and sewerage services of the city of Hyderabad. [ 1 ] HMWSSB was formed by the Andhra Pradesh Government with the provisions of Hyderabad Metropolitan Water Supply and Sewerage Act 1989 (Act No.15 of 1989).
MSEDCL supplies electricity to a total of 30.7 million consumers across the categories all over Maharashtra. There are about 22.93 million Domestic Residential (74.48%), 4.7 million Agricultural (15.4%), 2.2 million Commercial Consumers (7.33%), and 0.48 million Industrial consumers (1.56 %) in MSEDCL which fetch an Annual Revenue of about Rs. 1,16,817 Crs [Rs. 1,168 Billion] for FY2023-24.
Minister of Soil and Water Conservation 01 S. K. Wankhede (MLA for Sawargoan Constituency No. 49- Nagpur District) (Legislative Assembly) 01 May 1960 07 March 1962 1 year, 310 days Indian National Congress: Yashwantrao I: Yashwantrao Chavan: 02 Abdul Kader Salebhoy (MLA for Mumbai South Central Constituency No. 180- Mumbai City District)
Sustaining Water for All in a Changing Climate The World Bank, 2010, Case Study on water resources in Andhra Pradesh, India. pgs. 73–77. Comprehensive Portal on Water in India: India Water Portal; Solution Exchange:Water Community in India; Water and Environmental Sanitation Network India:WES-Net India Archived 15 February 2021 at the Wayback ...
Secunderabad was a liberal city compared to Hyderabad due to the presence of the British. The popular Secunderabad Club was established in 1878, at a country house gifted by Salar Jung I. Secunderabad has a more laid-back atmosphere because it is mainly a residential area with fewer government offices and corporate establishments.
Typical BWSSB water supply tank for the locality. BWSSB currently supplies approximately 900 million liters (238 million gallons) of water to the city per day, despite a municipal demand of 1.3 billion liters. Water for the city (with a population of 10 million) comes from a number of sources, with 80% of it coming from the Cauvery River.