A Tirupur
A Tirupur
A Tirupur
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2. Tirupur, a success story !
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2.1 Tirupur what it is today :
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2.3 Products and market :
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Knitwear exporters of Tirupur travel down to the earth
to reach the new horizons.
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Activities in the above units have given rise to
many ancillary activities such as manufacturing of
cartons, polythene bags, other packing material, zips,
buttons, tapes printing of labels etc . Nearby areas
are lined with the activities of spinning cotton into
yarns, knitting of fabrics, separating and dividing the
waste and scrap fabrics back into yarn for reprocessing
etc.
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First India Knit fair was organised in the year 1995
and thereafter 22 knit fairs have been organised so far.
India knit fair has now attained the importance of
international fairs, to persue business interest in
summer and autumn / winter knitwear trade throughout the
world. The location of the complex gives easy and fast
access from Coimbatore airport to the buyers visiting
the fair. Substantial increase in export of autumn /
winter wears from Tirupur is on account of these fairs.
STUDENTS AT NIFT-TEA
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The Institute awards 3 year diploma and one year
certificate course in fashion technology. Short term
courses of 1 to 3 months are organised for the inservice
personnels in various disciplines of knitwear industry.
The institute has state-of-art machinery and equipments,
including CAD and offers testing, training and designing
services to the industry.
SHIPMENT AT PORTS
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2.8 Apparel Park :
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for easy travel of containers, excellent water supply,
drainage and training facilities. NAP houses 60 knit
garment units of international standard with captive
power plant of 4 mega watt. A standard unit in NAP will
produce about 7500 pieces per day with unit value
realisation of US$ 3.00. This park is expected to
generate additional foreign exchange earnings of
approximately Rs.1500 crore. The park has got provision
of rain water harvesting, while there is no need of ETP
since no dyeing or printing is involved. Units in NAP
have availed funds under Technology Upgradation Fund of
Ministry of Textiles. Auditorium, R & D facilities,
conference halls, buyer’s lounge, working women hostel
etc are the essential components of the park.
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2.10 Other factors facilitating dramatic transformation of
Tirupur :
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3. Dyeing and bleaching support and environmental concern :
WATER POLLUTION
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water table in Tirupur and surrounding localities viz.
Avinashi, Palladam, Annur, Kangeyam and several parts of
neighbouring Erode district from where the water is
transported in lorries.
Many dyeing and bleaching units do not adopt scientific
methods of production and to save time, cost and
processing steps, their water consumption is on lower
side. Even then around 30 litres of water is consumed
for processing of 1 kg of textile product. This roughly
works out to per day requirement of somewhere 1 to 1.5
lakh cubic metre of fresh water, which after process, is
to be discharged to the drainage and hence to surface
water bodies and on land. It is estimated that around
80 thousand to 1 lakh cubic metre water is discharged
daily.
About 80% of this water comes from lorries from the
nearby villages as the water of Tirupur has become
badly contaminated with salt, colour and chemicals and
is unsuitable for dyeing and processing. Fetching of
water from nearby villages has depleted ground water
table there and has attracted resentment and protest
from the nearby villages. Most of the units are
producing cotton goods and are using reactive dyes,
salts and chemicals. Reactive dyes do not react 100%
with the fibres and about 30 – 40% goes in water. Such
unreacted dye alongwith chemicals such as caustic soda,
peroxides, wetting agents, hypochlorite, acids, soaps,
fixing agents, finishing chemicals and salts, even after
treatment in effluent treatment plants, is causing
serious environmental hazards. As per a study
conducted in 2001, Tirupur dyeing and bleaching units
consumed around 78000 tonnes of salt and 6600 tonnes of
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bleaching powder annually and whole of this or little
less goes to earth’s water system in one way or other.
Effluents of dyeing and bleaching units amounting to
around 70 – 80 million litres per day were being
discharged when the above study was made and the same
somehow or other were leading to Noyyal river which
passes through Tirupur. It is a seasonal river and
during dry season all polluted water would accumulate
and pollute cauvery river at the point of it’s
confluence at Kodumudy. Orathupalayam dam was
constructed in 1991 at the cost of Rs.16.46 crore with a
water spread area of 1049 acres to help in irrigation of
downstream areas of Noyyal river adjoining Tirupur i.e.
Erode and Karur district, has closed for almost 6 ½
years since this dam has been totally contaminated with
effluents from dyeing and processing units and it’s
water has been rendered unsuitable for agriculture. The
study has estimated that pollution of Noyyal river has
resulted in loss to agricultural production, fisheries
and public water supply scheme to the tune of Rs.50
crore annually.
This apart, transport of fresh water from nearby areas
costs around Rs.115 crore annually. Rs.52 crore worth
fuel is burnt into the atmosphere for this purpose,
contributing to increased green house gases.
All these miseries to the public have lead to filing of
court cases by the social groups and farmers against the
Tirupur dyeing units and honourable high court has taken
serious note of it.
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4. Judiciary’s Action :
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Govt. and Judiciary and the units have been given a
further breathing time on a specific formula.
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INDIA IS NO STRANGER TO LARGE WATER TRANSMISSION SCHEMES -
55KM OF NEW PIPELINE WERE CONSTRUCTED AS PART OF THIS PROJECT.
(PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF WHO/P. VIROT)
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Tirupur Municipality, which would include 60000 slum
dwellers and 35 MLD would be shared between the regions
remaining rural towns, villages and settlements.
Sanitation provision within the scheme includes 88 of
the city’s designated slum areas. Water treatment
plant is of 185 MLD based on rapid gravity filter with
lamella clarifier. The waste water facility takes
domestic sewage and uses activated sludge system to
achieve secondary treatment standards. The plant would
discharge into Noyyal river. Initially built with a
capacity of 15 MLD, it’s design allows eventual
expansion to double that when sewer provision is
extended to the remaining 15 of the town’s 52 wards.
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6. Other Initiatives :
6.1 MoU with Microsoft Corporation (India) Private Ltd.,
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6.3 Marine Discharge Project
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has been approved by the Ministry of Industry and
Commerce, Govt. of India, New Delhi to issue such
certificate of origin. This is another milestone
achieved by TEA to facilitate speedy export from
Tirupur.
7. Conclusion :
i) TEA Website
ii) Yellow Pages
iii) AEPC Website
iv) Report in Hindu Business Line, Aug 2, July 28
v) www.water – technology.net / projects / Tirupur
vi) Project of EPIC – In under TCIDS, November 04
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vii) Report on pollution problems in Tirupur
received from Regional Office of the Textile
Commissioner, Coimbatore.
viii) Details regarding Tirupur received from
Tirupur Exporters Association.
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