THIRSTY INDIA HEADING FOR CRISIS
HIMANSHU
VYAS/ HT PHOTO Villagers
head towards a water hole atop a hill where ground water has risen due to
harvesting in Piplantri village, Rajmasand district, Rajasthan
With ground water level at an all-time low and depleting
surface water resources, India needs water harvesting plans to rescue millions
from an arid future
Hindustan Times (Jalandhar), 5 Jun
2016
Drinking
water shortages are known to spark scuffles, but last week, it led to Sunil
Giri, (23), losing his life. Giri was beaten to death in the Ramgarh district
of Jharkhand for objecting to his neighbour Anwar Hussain taking more than his
share from a drinking-water tanker that reached the drought-affected village
after several days.
Similar
violence over water sharing has also been reported from water-scarce districts
in Maharashtra, Uttar Pradesh Madhya Pradesh, Rajasthan, Andhra Pradesh and
Telagana since April.
Scarcity
kills in other ways too. Yogita Ashok Desai, 12, died of heatstroke after her
fifth trip to fetch water from a handpump in drought-hit Beed district of
Maharashtra, when temperatures had crossed 47 degree Celsius in April.
In
the first week of May, a 15-year-old girl died and 23 others were injured when
the roof of an underground water tank collapsed while they were waiting to
collect water from the almost dry tank.
LOST SOURCES
The
World Resources Institute’s March 2016 report said 54 per cent of India was
water stressed, with scarcity affecting every part of the country except the
Himalayan region and the Ghats. “Almost 600 million people are at higher risk
of surface water supply disruptions,” the report said, attributing water stress
to climate change and poor water management.
With
surface water sources dwindling, people have shifted to unregulated tapping of
ground water — for agriculture and drinking — leading to levels dipping by
three times over the last 60 years, making groundwater the main drinking water
source for 80 per cent of the population.
Rising
temperature also mean greater human loss.
Of
the 4,204 lives lost to annual heat waves over the past four years, half were
in the drought year of 2015.
“The
deaths were a result of flawed government emphasis on building highcost dams
and canals that have wiped traditional ways of water harvesting,” said Himanshu
Thakkar of South Asian Network of Dams, Rivers and People.
Another
concern is that 50 per cent of ground water sources in the country are not
“completely safe”. Of the 660 districts, ground water in 276 districts has high
levels of fluoride, 387 districts have nitrate above safe levels and 86
districts arsenic, shows data from Central Ground Water Board’s latest report.
Close
to 650 major towns and cities in India are on the banks of rivers contaminated
with pesticides from farms and effluents from industry, said the latest report
of the Central Pollution Control Board, which afflicts 100 million people with
sickness each year because of contaminated drinking ground water.
If that’s not enough, more and more
states are entangled in disputes over water share from major rivers, from
Haryana and Punjab in the north to Tamil Nadu and Kerala in the south to
Arunachal and Assam in the north-east.
THE WAY AHEAD
If
ground water exploitation continues, the World Bank estimates that the per
capita water availability in India — where 46 farmers committed suicide every
day in 2014 — by 2030 may shrink to half from the 2010 level of 1,588 cubic
metres per year. This will push India into the ‘water scarce’ category (1,700
cubic metres per year), from its existing ‘water stress’ classification (1,000
cubic meter per year).
“We
have to adopt a bottom-up approach with a mix of modern and traditional
solutions that are acceptable and inclusive,” said Arvind Panagariya,
vice-chairman of National Institution for Transforming India (NITI) Aayog,
which is holding consultations with states on water stress management.
To
start with, the water resources ministry has drafted two model bills — first
for overall water management and second for ground water — aimed at improving
water management and groundwater levels. Shashi Shekhar, secretary, water
resources, said the water problem was escalating and the proposed laws could
ensure better and efficient water management.
But
a lot depends on states as water is a state subject. Some, like Maharashtra and
Rajasthan, have started community-based Jal Swabhilambhan schemes that give
ownership of government-aided watershed management to communities. “We just aid
and assist the villagers in creating durable water assets. The villages decide
what they want,” says Sriram Vedire of Rajasthan Water Authority, who initiated
the programme in half of the state’s districts in early 2016.
It
is too early to state whether the Rajasthan model works but independent studies
have shown that similar community-based watershed management programmes have
improved ground water levels in Jhabua districts of Madhya Pradesh.
Panagariya
hoped that it can work elsewhere also provided “right” government intervention
happens. Mukul Sanwal, retired civil servant and former director of UN Climate
Change Secretariat, said restoring traditional water harvesting and management
systems like ‘bundis (household ponds)’ to store rainfall water has worked and
will work as it is a timetested model that was destroyed during the British
era. “Even the Mughals gave tax rebates if farmers invested in water
harvesting,” he recalled.
CLOSE
TO 650 MAJOR TOWNS AND CITIES IN INDIA ARE ON THE BANKS OF RIVERS CONTAMINATED
WITH PESTICIDES FROM FARMS AND EFFLUENTS FROM INDUSTRY
SOURCE:
Hindustan Times, 05 2016
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