Flight operations resume in Andal; coal production to return to normalcy
06 Aug 2024
Flight operations have resumed after three days from Kazi Nazrul Islam
Airport in Andal from today, and coal production from open-cast coal mines has
also resumed from today as rainfall stops
Flight operations have resumed after three
days from Kazi Nazrul Islam Airport in Andal from today, and coal production
from open-cast coal mines has also resumed from today as rainfall stops, and
Damodar Valley Corporation has reduced the water discharges from its Panchet
and Maithon dams, situated on the Bengal-Jharkhand border. “We are pleased to
announce that, post the unprecedented natural disaster in West Burdwan, regular
scheduled flights from Kazi Nazrul Islam Airport have resumed this morning,”
said Kailash Mondal, director of the airport.
Flights from Durgapur to Mumbai, Durgapur
to Bengaluru, Durgapur to Hyderabad, and Durgapur to New Delhi have operated
today. Since the last three days, flight operations have been stopped after the
area was inundated due to heavy rainfall. The KNI airport authority worked hard
in a war-footing manner to restore normalcy. It has suffered huge losses due to
three-day flight cancellations. Talking to The Statesman, Niladri Roy, director
technical (operations) of central public sector Eastern Coalfields Limited
(ECL), said that the coal behemoth has suffered one lakhs of tonnes per day of
coal production due to the inundation in its 25 underground coal mines.
“In coal mining areas, there has been 300
to 400 millimetres of rainfall in the past three days, leading to the severe
loss of operations at ECL. Instead of usually twentyseven to twenty-eight
coalloaded rakes dispatched to power plants in the country, ECL has been able
to send only 15 to 16 rakes, which means about 10 to 12 rakes less in the past
three days,” added Roy. Slowly, production has resumed today, and we hope that
production will be normal tomorrow. Luckily, the power houses have sufficient
coal storage to date, and from tomorrow, dispatches will not be an issue, he
said. The 25 open-cast coal mines of ECL spread over West Bengal and Jharkhand
produce 80 per cent of the total coal production of 1,20,000 tonnes per day. In
West Bengal, ECL supplies rakes of power-grade coal to the power plants of the
West Bengal Power Development Corporation and Damodar Valley Corporation.
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As the rainfall has stopped in the upper
catchment area of the Damodar River in Jharkhand, Damodar Valley Corporation
has released 6,000 cusecs of water from Maithon and 43,000 cusecs of water from
its Panchet Dam. It is likely that the discharge will further decrease
tomorrow. From Durgapur Barrage, about 1,15,000 cusecs of water have been
released today, which is still low compared to yesterday. The District
Magistrate of Bankura, Siyad N, and the SP of Bankura, Vaibhav Tiwari, both
visited and inspected the Durgapur Barrage last evening. They talked with the
irrigation department officials and said that the people neighbouring Manar
Char, Barjora and Sonamukhi areas have been alerted. The DM has said that the
approach road will be repaired once the monsoon season is over.
In Asansol, a school student named Iftikar
Ahmed (14) has been killed after he fell into an abandoned open-cast coal mine
that has been filled up by heavy rainwater in the past few days near the blue
factory under the Asansol north police station area. The ninth-grade student
drowned yesterday afternoon, and the dead body was rescued this morning by
police. So far, in the Asansol district headquarters of West Burdwan district,
four people have drowned. Slowly, the water level of the rivulets, high drains
and other water bodies has been decreasing as the rainfall has stopped since
yesterday. West Bengal CM Mamata Banerjee has instructed all the DMs and SPs of
South Bengal districts to remain alert on Tuesday due to the high tide.