Bengaluru: After spending 15 per cent more on the revised government bus fares, Bengalureans may have to shell out more money on the water they consume and on their travel in Namma Metro and auto rickshaws. For Bengaluru Water Supply and Sewerage Board (BWSSB), Bengaluru Metro Rail Corporation Limited (BMRCL) and Auto Rickshaw Unions have submitted proposals to increase water tariff and fares of metro rail and auto rickshaws citing huge spikes in their operational costs.
The BWSSB has already announced its intention to hike water tariffs and is waiting for another round of meetings with Deputy Chief Minister DK Shivakumar, who is also the Bengaluru Development Minister and the city MLAs to take a final call. "The meeting is likely to be held in the third or fourth week of January where a final decision will be taken," said a senior official from BWSSB.
BWSSB Chairman Ram Prasat Manohar on many occasions said that the hike in water tariff is inevitable for the very survival of the BWSSB. "The board has not hiked the water tariff since 2013 whereas power tariffs have gone up three times in this period. This has put a substantial financial burden. The board is incurring a loss of Rs 40 crore every month. The loss is set to go up to Rs 90 crore a day after the commissioning of the 5th Stage of the Cauvery Drinking Water Project, which is nearing completion," he said. While the exact quantum of the hike is yet to be disclosed, the sources in BWSSB said the hike will be gradual and optimum.
The World Bank has also reportedly recommended a hike in water tariff as a pre-condition to its offer of providing a Rs 3,500 crore loan to BWSSB and BBMP for management of floods, construction of stormwater drains and improving water supply.
Namma Metro prices to go up by 40 per cent to 45 per cent