NY Times March 12, 2013
Rains or Not, India Is Falling Short on Drinkable Water
By GARDINER HARRIS

CHERRAPUNJI, India — Almost no place on Earth gets more rain than this 
small hill town. Nearly 40 feet falls every year — more than 12 times 
what Seattle gets. Storms often drop more than a foot a day. The monsoon 
is epic.

But during the dry season from November through March, many in this 
corner of India struggle to find water. Some are forced to walk long 
distances to fill jugs in springs or streams. Taps in Shillong, the 
capital of Meghalaya State, spout water for just a few hours a day. And 
when it arrives, the water is often not drinkable.

That people in one of the rainiest places on the planet struggle to get 
potable water is emblematic of the profound water challenges that India 
faces. Every year, about 600,000 Indian children die because of diarrhea 
or pneumonia, often caused by toxic water and poor hygiene, according to 
Unicef.

Half of the water supply in rural areas, where 70 percent of India’s 
population lives, is routinely contaminated with toxic bacteria. 
Employment in manufacturing in India has declined in recent years, and a 
prime reason may be the difficulty companies face getting water.

And India’s water problems are likely to worsen. A report that McKinsey 
& Company helped to write predicted that India would need to double its 
water-generation capacity by the year 2030 to meet the demands of its 
surging population.

A separate analysis concluded that groundwater supplies in many of 
India’s cities — including Delhi, Mumbai, Hyderabad and Chennai — are 
declining at such a rapid rate that they may run dry within a few years.

The water situation in Gurgaon, the new mega-city south of Delhi, became 
so acute last year that a judge ordered a halt to new construction until 
projects could prove they were using recycled water instead of groundwater.

On Feb. 28, India’s finance minister, Palaniappan Chidambaram, proposed 
providing $2.8 billion to the Ministry of Drinking Water and Sanitation 
in the coming fiscal year, a 17 percent increase.

But water experts describe this as very little in a country where more 
than 100 million people scrounge for water from unimproved sources.

Some water problems stem from India’s difficult geography. Vast parts of 
the country are arid, and India has just 4 percent of the world’s fresh 
water shared among 16 percent of its people.

But the country’s struggle to provide water security to the 2.6 million 
residents of Meghalaya, blessed with more rain than almost any place, 
shows that the problems are not all environmental.

Arphisha lives in Sohrarim, a village in Meghalaya, and she must walk a 
mile during the dry season to the local spring, a trip she makes four to 
five times a day. Sometimes her husband fetches water in the morning, 
but mostly the task is left to her. Indeed, fetching water is mostly 
women’s work in India.

On a recent day, Arphisha, who has only one name, took the family 
laundry to the spring, which is a pipe set in a cement abutment. While 
her 2-year-old son, Kevinson, played nearby, Arphisha beat clothes on a 
cement and stone platform in front of the spring. Her home has 
electricity several hours a day and heat from a coal stove. But there is 
no running water. When it rains, she uses a barrel to capture runoff 
from her roof.

“It’s nice having the sunshine now, but my life is much easier during 
the monsoon,” she said.

Kevinson interrupted her work by bringing her an empty plastic bottle. 
“Water,” he said. Arphisha bent down, filled the bottle and gave it back 
to him. “Say, ‘Thank you,’ ” she said. “Say, ‘Thank you.’ ” When he 
silently drank, turned and went back to playing, Arphisha laughed and 
shrugged her shoulders.

In the somewhat larger town of Mawmihthied several miles away, Khrawbok, 
the village headman, walked nearly a mile on a goat path to point out 
the spring most residents visit to get drinking water. Taps in 
Mawmihthied have running water for two hours every morning, but the 
water is not fit to drink.

Khrawbok said that officials would like to provide better water, but 
that there was no money.

Even in India’s great cities, water problems are endemic, in part 
because system maintenance is nearly nonexistent. Water plants in New 
Delhi, for instance, generate far more water per customer than many 
cities in Europe, but taps in the city operate on average just three 
hours a day because 30 percent to 70 percent of the water is lost to 
leaky pipes and theft.

As a result, many residents install pumps to pull as much water out of 
the pipes as possible. But those pumps also suck contaminants from 
surrounding soil.

The collective annual costs of pumps and other such measures are three 
times what the city would need to maintain its water system adequately, 
said Smita Misra, a senior economist at the World Bank.

“India is lagging far behind the rest of the world in providing water 
and sanitation both to its rural and urban populations,” Ms. Misra said. 
“Not one city in India provides water on an all-day, everyday basis.”

And even as towns and cities increase water supplies, most fail to build 
the far more expensive infrastructure to treat sewage. So as families 
connect their homes to new water lines and build toilets, many flush the 
resulting untreated sewage into the nearest creek, making many of the 
less sophisticated water systems that much more dangerous.

“As drinking water reaches more households, all the resulting sewage has 
become a huge problem,” said Tatiana Gallego-Lizon, a principal urban 
development specialist at the Asian Development Bank.

In Meghalaya, efforts to improve the area’s water supply have been 
stymied by bickering among competing government agencies, said John F. 
Kharshiing, chairman of the Grand Council of Chiefs of Meghalaya. In one 
infamous example, the state built a pump near a river to bring water to 
towns at higher elevations.

“But they didn’t realize that the pump would be underwater during the 
monsoon,” Mr. Kharshiing said. “So it shorted out that first year, and 
it’s never been used since.”

Sruthi Gottipati contributed reporting from Meghalaya State, India.
_______________________________________________
pen-l mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.csuchico.edu/mailman/listinfo/pen-l

Reply via email to