"We are happy to say that sufficient rains have filled up our reservoirs up to 90 per cent as four out of seven reservoirs, from which we supply water to the metropolis, have started overflowing," Ashok Tawadia, Chief Hydrolic Engineer of BMC told PTI.
He said Tulsi Lake, Vehar Lake, the Modak Sagar and Tansa lakes have started overflowing.
Out of the total requirement of 14.50 million litre for the entire year, we have reserved 13.13 million litre of water in seven reservoirs up to 6 AM today, he said.
According to the daily lake level report released by the civic body yesterday, Vehar started overflowing at 4.20 AM on August 1, Modak Sagar started overflowing at 10.28 PM on Monday night and Tansa started overflowing at 2.14 AM yesterday.
Upper Vaitarna, Middle Vaitarna and Bhatsa are the three catchment areas that still need to be filled, out of which Bhatsa reservoir is the largest water supplying dam, Tawadia said.
Meanwhile, the civic body has alerted local administration in surrounding areas to be careful as overflow may cause flash floods.
Mumbai's water supply comes from seven reservoirs which store rainwater.
These are: Modak Sagar (built in 1957), Tansa lake (built in 1925), Vehar lake (built in 1860), Tulsi lake (built in 1879), Upper Vaitarna (built in 1973), Bhatsa (built in 1983) and Middle Vaitarna (built in 2012).
The civic body supplies 3,750 million litres of water
everyday to the island city and suburbs, which falls short of the actual demand for 4,200 million litres.
Recently, it had revoked 20 per cent cut in the water supply to the megapolis which was imposed in August last year.
