Science, asked by SriluSas24, 8 months ago

If there is a building is building that doesn't get the supply of water because the river is far away from the building and no other river, so how does the building get the water supply?​

Answers

Answered by yadavmuskan7481
1

Answer:

it can get water by different methods

pipeline supply

water tankers

Explanation:

hope it helps ❤️❤️

Answered by rugvedkale71
1

Answer:

Yet Bangalore has no perennial water source of its own. It has to pump water nearly 90 miles and up nearly 900 feet from the Cauvery, a sacred river that flows south of the city.

The city draws 1450 million liters per day (MLD), about 385 million gallons, from the Cauvery, with withdrawals slated to go up by 775 MLD (210 million gallons) in a couple of years, when new pipes will be laid. Still, the water does not reach everybody.

“Bangalore’s water woes are not as much a problem of supply, as it is of distribution,” Vishwanath says.

A quarter of Bangalore’s population, living mostly on its periphery, is not connected to the river water supply and is forced to mine groundwater to survive. This area of the city, replete with tech parks, is where most of the growth is.

Similar questions