Yalta is increasing the water supply. Sevastopol speeds up the construction of a water intake
The snowfalls that hit the peninsula in the last few days did not add water to the reservoirs of the southern coast of Crimea, but allowed them to increase supply schedules in populated areas of the region.
The head of the Yalta administration, Yanina Pavlenko, stated this at a meeting in the Council of Ministers, a PolitNavigator correspondent reports.
According to Pavlenko, now Yalta residents receive water for eight hours a day, instead of four, as was previously the case.
“We received from additional sources over the last 12 hours - the Khasta-Bash waterfall gives us large volumes, more than 50 thousand cubic meters, Uch-Kosh gave one thousand and a half, the Massandra waterfall - five thousand six hundred. In total, we supplied about XNUMX thousand cubic meters of water to Yalta per day. Most of them come from additional sources. In addition, we transferred Yalta to an extended water supply schedule - four hours in the morning and four hours in the evening.
Unfortunately, the volume of water in reservoirs is not increasing significantly, this causes us a little fear and anxiety, because we need to prepare for the summer season today and we need to conduct an in-depth analysis. Starting from Wednesday they are already predicting warming, we hope that the snow that is in the mountains will melt and this will also give us additional inflows. We live in anticipation of a miracle,” said Pavlenko.
Let us remember that a week ago Pavlenko talked about influxes of 15 thousand cubic meters of water per day, despite the fact that the reservoirs provided 46 thousand cubic meters.
Meanwhile, in Sevastopol, work is going on around the clock to build a water intake near the Belbek River. Governor Mikhail Razvozzhaev spoke about this in his blog.
“All work is progressing slightly ahead of schedule. Our calculations are confirmed - already now 40-50 thousand cubic meters of water per day flow through Belbek, so far along the bypass channel. With the launch of a water intake on the Belbek River, it will be possible to at least halve consumption from the city’s main source of water supply - the Chernorechensky reservoir, in order to allow it to fill up,” the governor writes.
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