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Bewarse Talk Discussion Board * Archives - 2017 * Archive through May 11, 2017 * India's Silicon Valley is dying of thirst < Previous Next >

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Andhravodu
Pilla Bewarse
Username: Andhravodu

Post Number: 87
Registered: 04-2017
Posted From: 69.62.241.11
Posted on Wednesday, May 10, 2017 - 11:13 am:    Edit Post Delete Post Print Post


Sakkineni:


second grade cities don't have the infra. Most places can't even guarantee 24 hours electricity

Even if you have electricity, south mottam depend ayyedi rainwater and rivers meeda. unna 400 million population ki gattiga 10 major reservoirs levu
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Sakkineni
Kurra Bewarse
Username: Sakkineni

Post Number: 2111
Registered: 04-2012
Posted From: 12.130.208.36
Posted on Wednesday, May 10, 2017 - 9:57 am:    Edit Post Delete Post Print Post

Time to upgrade second grade cities emo india lo ippudu, metropolis ni penchukunta pothe kastam natural resources dorakataniki
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Andhravodu
Pilla Bewarse
Username: Andhravodu

Post Number: 86
Registered: 04-2017
Posted From: 69.62.241.11
Posted on Wednesday, May 10, 2017 - 9:56 am:    Edit Post Delete Post Print Post

2 varshalu padite drought cured antaru India lo

No reservoirs, no rainwater, each city population is multi millions
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Platypus
Pilla Bewarse
Username: Platypus

Post Number: 68
Registered: 12-2015
Posted From: 167.220.196.247
Posted on Wednesday, May 10, 2017 - 7:46 am:    Edit Post Delete Post Print Post

BANGALORE HAS A PROBLEM: It is running out of water, fast. Cities all over the world, from those in the American West to nearly every major Indian metropolis, have been struggling with drought and water deficits in recent years. But Banga­lore is an extreme case. Last summer, a professor from the Indian Institute of Science declared that the city will be unlivable by 2020. He later backed off his prediction of the exact time of death—but even so, says P. N. Ravindra, an official at the Bangalore Water Supply and Sewerage Board, “the projections are relatively correct. Our groundwater levels are approaching zero.”

https://www.wired.com/2017/05/why-bangalores-water-crisis-is-everyones-crisis/?m bid=nl_5217_p3&CNDID=31755630
Naaku nacchinadhi meeku nachhadhu... Meeku nacchinadhi naaku nacchadhu... Nenanthe, adho type :-)

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