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Source URL:
http://business.rediff.com/slide-show/2009/dec/11/slide-show-1-water-crisis-what-india-is-doing.htm


If you are afraid because your tap has been running dry lately, then it is
time you braced yourself for worse times to follow. Terrifying times, in
fact.

By the year 2020, says a recent World Bank report, most major Indian cities
will run dry. Given the state of the monsoon this year, it would appear that
the World Bank report has come true almost a decade earlier.

Severe water shortage had already led to a growing number of conflicts
across the country, with 90 per cent of India's territory served by
inter-state rivers.

India's supply of water too is rapidly dwindling primarily due to
mismanagement of water resources, although over-pumping and pollution are
also significant contributors.

Climate change is expected to worsen the situation by causing erratic and
unpredictable weather, which could drastically diminish the supply of water
coming from rainfall and glaciers.

However, we are not still ready to accept the reality of depleting
groundwater reserves in India. This condition has caused a major water
crisis.

Water.org, an NGO with which Hollywood actor Matt Damon is closely attached,
gives some terrifying water facts (globally):

3.575 million people die each year from water-related diseases

43% of water-related deaths are due to diarrhoea.

84% of water-related deaths are in children ages 0 - 14.

98% of water-related deaths occur in the developing world.

884 million people, lack access to safe water supplies, approximately one in
eight people.

The water and sanitation crisis claims more lives through disease than any
war claims through guns.

At any given time, half of the world's hospital beds are occupied by
patients suffering from a water-related disease.

Less than 1% of the world's fresh water (or about 0.007% of all water on
earth) is readily accessible for direct human use.

*More water facts*

 An American taking a five-minute shower uses more water than the typical
person living in a developing country slum uses in a whole day.

About a third of people without access to an improved water source live on
less than $1 a day. More than two thirds of people without an improved water
source live on less than $2 a day.

Poor people living in the slums often pay 5-10 times more per litre of water
than wealthy people living in the same city.

Without food a person can live for weeks, but without water you can expect
to live only a few days.

The daily requirement for sanitation, bathing, and cooking needs, as well as
for assuring survival, is about 13.2 gallons per person.

Over 50 percent of all water projects fail and less than five percent of
projects are visited, and far less than one percent have any longer-term
monitoring.

Only 62% of the world's population has access to improved sanitation -
defined as a sanitation facility that ensures hygienic separation of human
excreta from human contact.

Every 15 seconds, a child dies from a water-related disease.

Millions of women and children spend several hours a day collecting water
from distant, often polluted sources.

*Climate change, another threat*

In an unprecedented incident, a 30-year-old man, who was part of a
1,000-strong group protesting against the stringent water cut outside the
Bombay Municipal Corporation headquarters recently, died of apparent cardiac
failure during a police lathicharge.

Viral Dholakia, who died before he could be taken to GT Hospital a few
metres away, was a founder member of Swabhimaan, an NGO set up by Narayan
Rane's son, Nitesh, who was also leading the protest.

Incidents like these, however weird they may seem now, are bound to get
repeated unless we sit up and take some drastic steps to counter water
crisis, which is sure to assume alarming proportions in years to come

With climate change set to have unpredictable consequences on water regime,
the action plan, he said, aims at increasing water use efficiency by 20 per
cent and promote basin level integrated water resources management.

Noting that efficient use of crop water can increase the gross irrigated
area either by increasing the irrigated cropped area or the irrigation
intensity, the prime minister said that the second green revolution could
come from technologies developed in the private sector.

"Water related issues need to be addressed with full involvement of local
people and taking into account the local conditions. Farmers should be
consulted in any agricultural water management initiatives.

"Women too play a key role in food production activities in many countries.
A special effort should be made to involve them in decision making," he
said.

*A few causes*

This crisis is not just the disturbance in the demand and supply curve but
is also about mismanagement of water resources.

India's water crisis is a man-made problem. One of the major problems is
water pollution.

New Delhi alone produces 3.6 million cubic meters of sewage every day, but
because of poor managementm less than half is effectively treated. The
remaining untreated waste is dumped into the Yamuna River. Thus a
combination of sewage disposal, industrial effluents, and chemicals from
farm runoffs, arsenic and fluoride has rendered India's rivers unfit for
drinking, irrigation, and even industrial purposes.

Also, the over-usage of ground water due to the unavailability of sufficient
water for irrigation has led to a tremendous decrease in the level of ground
water.

Also, because of global warming, rainfalls have become erratic and
unpredictable because of which the agricultural sector has been affected
seriously.

We need to take rational steps to manage water in India before it becomes an
international crisis, as this will affect the nation's economy and will also
lead to various water-borne diseases.

The reasons for this extreme drop rate lie mainly in the use of groundwater
for irrigation, according to B M Jha, chairman of the Indian Central Ground
Water Board.

The Central Ground Water Board is the apex national organisation, working
under the ministry of water resources and is responsible for various
activities related to exploration, development and management of groundwater
resources in the country.

In the wake of the Green Revolution, irrigation of cropland in India has
taken on a new dimension.

As the major reasons for the drop in the water table in the north-western
part of the country, Jha cites the accompanying gradual change in the
cropping pattern from wheat to paddy-grown rice, the latter being a more
water intensive crop, as well as the free power or the flat power tariff for
running the irrigation pump rigs.

*How grave is the crisis?*

In India, the groundwater table in some regions is dropping dramatically. A
team of researchers led by Matthew Rodell of the Hydrological Sciences
Branch of NASA recently measured just how severe the situation is for the
states of Rajasthan, Punjab and Haryana (including Delhi).

The results were published in August 2009, in the online edition of the
science magazine Nature.

According to these results, the water table in these regions is dropping by
17.7 + 4.5 cubic kilometres annually. During the August 2002-October 2008
study period, the groundwater loss was 109 cubic kilometres.

This corresponds to twice the volume of India's largest surface water
reservoir.

*Most Indian cities to go dry by 2020*

India is expected to experience a severe water crisis by 2020 with the per
capita availability of water projected to be less than 1,000 cubic metres.

Indian water scenario was a matter of grave concern, as 85 per cent of water
was used for agriculture, 10 per cent for industry and five per cent for
domestic use, according to a paper presented at a national symposium in
Coimbatore, Tamil Nadu.

Being a developing nation with a large population on the negative side of
the poverty line, economic water scarcity (limited access to fresh water
because of lower affordability) assumed equal, if not, greater importance as
that of physical water scarcity, it said.

Quoting a World Bank study, it said of the 27 Asian cities with population
of over 10 lakh (1 million), Chennai and Delhi were ranked as the worst
performing metropolitan cities in terms of water availability per day, while
Mumbai was ranked as second worst performer, and Kolkata the fourth worst.

Severe water shortage had already led to a growing number of conflicts
across the country, with 90 per cent of India's territory served by
inter-state rivers.

The row between Karnataka and Tamil Nadu over river Cauvery waters, between
Maharashtra and Karnataka over river Godavari, and between Madhya Pradesh
and Gujarat over the Narmada waters are some of the confilcts, the paper
said.

The conflicts are being bitterly fought at all levels, imposing very high
economic environmental costs.

Climate change projections showed India's water problems were only likely to
worsen and with more rain expected to fall in fewer days and the rapid
melting of glaciers, especially in the western Himalayas, India would need
to gear up to tackle increasing incidence of droughts and floods, the paper
said.

Global fresh water supplies were continuously stressed by rising demands
from growing population and its ever increasing needs for hygiene,
sanitation, food and industrial needs.

While the world's population tripled in the 20th century, the use of
renewable water resources has grown six-fold and within next 50 years, the
world population would increase by another 40 to 50 per cent, it claimed.

On water facts, the paper said that a billion people in the world do not
have access to safe water, which was roughly one sixth of the world's
population.

About 1.8 million people died every year as a result of diseases caused by
unclean water and poor sanitation, which amounted to around 5,000 deaths a
day.

The simple act of washing hands with soap and water can reduce diarrhoeal
cases by over 40 per cent, since water-related disease was the second
biggest killer of children worldwide, after acute respiratory infections
like tuberculosis, it said.

*Water crisis to affect agri production*

Water crisis is sure to lead to a sharp decline in agricultural production,
which will negate all of the previous efforts at food security.

India will become a net importer of grain, which will have a huge effect on
global food prices, as well as the global supply of food. A rise in food
prices will aggravate poverty because people will have to spend larger
portions of their income on food.

In addition to devastating the agricultural sector of India's economy, the
water crisis will have a big effect on India's industrial sector, possibly
stagnating many industries.

India has the power to avoid this dark future if people take action
immediately: start conserving water, begin to harvest rainwater, treat
human, agricultural, and industrial waste effectively, and regulate how much
water can be drawn out of the ground.

*initiatives*

According to the chairman of the Indian Central Ground Water Board, the
Indian government has taken various steps to get the groundwater problem
under control.

Rainwater harvesting und artificial recharge schemes are playing a major
role in this endeavour.

Other important points are capacity building, an awareness campaign on
rainwater harvesting and conservation of water resources and regulation of
groundwater development in selected areas of the country.

Along with the central government, the state governments are also actively
involved in the fight against the dropping water table.

They are offering stimuli to grow crops that require less water, they are
placing restrictions on financial institutions providing loans for
procurement of submersible pump rigs, and they are trying to stagger the
sowing season in such a way as to reduce the peak water demand.






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Thank you.

with regards,
PRASANTHI.
http://groups.google.com/group/birdsofsamefeathers
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