- Anuradha Kataria, 25 jan 2013
Published in the
International Affairs Forum
Supporting a population base of over 1.2 billion people are India’s
fragile river systems that are on the brink of, or perhaps already are,
an ecological disaster. Contaminated with untreated industrial and human
waste, in many places the rivers waters are considered unfit for
bathing, leave alone drinking. To compound the problem further, India’s
ground water is falling at an alarming level, in some places going down
1 – 3 meters a year. The World Bank has predicted that India’s ground
water table may even dry up in 12 – 15 years time. Acute water shortage
may cripple the bustling nation’s peace and progress in times to come.
Yet there seems little focus in the media on such a critical issue and
activism or initiatives around the cause seem at best marginal. There is
a need to bring the issue to the forefront so that the underlying
causes can be addressed, while there still is time. What could be done
to make safe and plentiful water a reality for the common man?
In terms of falling ground water table, a problem indeed in most
parts of the world today, a key reason is poor agricultural practices.
India’s agriculture still depends upon small scattered farms producing
traditional crops using ground water for irrigation. As per election
freebees, water and power are given free to farmers and they have little
incentive to conserve the precious resource. India underwent a green
revolution a few decades back which led to spurt in agricultural output
but not enough attention was paid to water conservation in terms of
crops selection or irrigation practices. India now needs a blue
revolution in its agriculture to bring about optimum use of water and
that would mean changing cropping patters to suit the natural climate
and rainfall as well as consolidation of farms to improve efficiency. So
long as agriculture revolves around tiny farms, it is hard to educate
individual farmers or effectively bring about a change. In the present
scenario, farming is also a non remunerative business only providing
bare minimum sustenance to the famers often resulting in large number of
suicides in several regions. A cooperative movement may be the need of
the hour to amalgamate farms such that larger farms may be able to use
machinery as well as technical knowhow for better productivity and
efficient use of natural resources like water. There have been some
such cooperative movements in the past which have borne good results and
can serve as a good model. However nowadays, the economic focus is
mainly on the manufacturing and services industries while a core sector
like agriculture has taken a back seat with little initiatives other
than election time stunts like free power, loan waivers etc. Amidst such
apathy, the ground water table keeps falling at an alarming rate yet
hardly raises an alarm.
India’s water problem is not just quantitative but also qualitative;
its rivers have got so contaminated by human and industrial waste that
they are often referred to as sewers and drains rather than rivers. For
instance, the great river Ganges at places has been recorded to have
fecal coli form levels at 1,00,000 per 100 ml – the highest such figure
on Earth rendering the water unfit for even bathing. Waterborne
illnesses such as typhoid, dysentery, diarrhea, cholera, gastroenteritis
etc., afflict millions of people dependent on the river. Like the
Ganges, many other rivers are also considered sacred but are equally
putrid and increasingly dermatologists and doctors advise against the
“holy dip” which is customary during the festivals. The water is so
polluted that it leads to several skin infections. Under pressure from
the Supreme Court, some city water boards have plans for sewage
treatment plants which will make the waters fit for bathing. But having
spent millions already on many such projects, it is doubted that the
water boards can deliver on even such a basic task of making the water
fit just for bathing while they are yet to even set any milestones for
water fit for drinking. Also the Board alone could not carry out this
task as there seems little pressure on industries that pump gallons of
hazardous waste into the river system. In some cities like Kanpur,
small scattered tanneries dump tons of poisonous waste into the water
daily. As the rivers course their way through the plains, they
accumulate all the waste of humankind and achieve a level of filth
downstream that is crying out for attention and action. While various
administrative bodies claim to have spent millions of rupees in cleaning
up these rivers, the money seems to have gone down the drain, quite
literally. The problem yet remains on cleaning up the rivers whereas the
solution should focus on ensuring untreated waste is not dumped into
the rivers in the first place. There should be stringent laws and
penalties on industries big and small as well as city water boards for
polluting the rivers. However, the key problem remains lack of
sufficient attention or public outcry on the important cause.
These problems afflict most other developing countries too where
safe drinking water is a far cry. Likewise, water table drying up is a
global problem affecting almost every nation in the world from China to
Africa to Central plains of America. It might be of great significance
if there were an international movement to save water. Cooperation and
sharing of best practices among nations may give a boost to agricultural
productivity as well as enable means of conserving ground water.
Similar sharing of best practices may also help frame laws and enforce
mechanisms to contain rivers pollution. In the developing world summits,
which usually focus mostly on their economic stories, the radar should
be shifted to human rights issues like water which should be treated as a
priority. As things stand, access to safe and plentiful drinking water
is a basic human need that remains unquenched for billions across the
world.
Comments in Chronological order (1 total comments)
 |
 |
 |
Anuradha..well written article...kind of scared the c*** out of me (
forgive my language). More people should be reading these articles to
become conscious of the problem and spread the awareness. Imagine, the
water table drying up in just 15-20 years...it is scary. |
|