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C O V E R  S T O R Y

WINNING WATER


British raj…taking control

Then came the colonisers. In 1858 the British Crown took up the reins of control. The sole aim of the rulers was to increase revenue. So they stripped the village institutions off their authority to manage local resources. They imposed huge land taxes, even during droughts. And the villagers struggling to pay off could no longer raise funds to maintain the ponds, wells and canals.

The government with its gigantic network of officials took control over the land. And the water.

Temples of water: wisdom The desi babus
The foreign rulers destroyed India’s ancient water tradition. The native babus who took charge after Independence did nothing to restore it. In fact, they did everything to ensure that water remained under the control of the government authorities. The mantra of the era was ‘big dams—the temples of modern India’. It still remains the passion of our rulers—who continue to spend crores of rupees on them. Let’s take Andhra Pradesh as an example. Here, more than Rs. 128 billion has been spent on large irrigation projects since 1950!!!. Do you want to know how much has been spent in the entire country? Find out!

You must have read about India’s ‘history of dams’ in your text books. The basic idea was to store, check and regulate the flow of our numerous rivers by building gigantic, concrete structures on them. And as I have told you—big money has been spent on these big dams.

Water panchayats

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An eri-One third of agricultural land in Tamil Nadu is irrigated by eris

Customary water rights in Tamil Nadu and Karnataka

Two states that are at loggerheads today over sharing the Cauvery waters for irrigation, once had an excellent water management regime in place, the water panchayat.

Some excerpts from inscriptions dated 13th century AD, during the Chola regime

dot3.gif (72 bytes) Tank irrigation: Eris (tanks) were maintained by village communities.

dot3.gif (72 bytes) Village government: Bore collective responsibility . Funds were raised through individuals, or the village assembly to manage tanks. No outsider had a role to play in this.

dot3.gif (72 bytes) Water ownership and tax: A special cess called eriayam was collected for annual repairs.

dot3.gif (72 bytes) Dispute settlement: Also solved locally. Even squabbles between two villages used to be sorted out jointly by the heads of the two communities.

So was that a total waste? Of course not…we needed them to cater to India’s growing millions---no billions! The problem was that the government put in all its attention and money in these humungous engineering projects…and forgot all about the home-grown, traditional systems of water management.

Forgetting the small — a big mistake!
Now that was a major mistake. Why? Let me share with you some interesting facts. Here it goes:

dot3.gif (72 bytes) In 1955, an Indian citizen had about 5000 cubic metres of water per year at her disposal for use. Today she has less than 1500 cubic metres. And the share is depleting everyday!

dot3.gif (72 bytes) Inspite of the crores being spent on big dams and irrigation structures, more than 40 per cent of our farmers depend on the monsoons to water their land.

dot3.gif (72 bytes) Even today, the government admits to ‘not being able to provide’ safe drinking water to more than half of the country’s population. The actual figure is far higher. Does Chandru get clean drinking water from the municipality? "No. We buy bottled water from the market," he says.

Ground waterGround reality
But hey…let’s do a reality check here. Surely, no one can do without his or her share of water...even for a day! If the government cannot supply enough, where are the householders, industrialists, farmers, getting their quota from?

The answer is groundwater. Did you know that India is among the largest exploiters of groundwater? Out of the 200 cubic kilometres of groundwater drawn globally every year, India extracts more than 66 per cent!

Result? More than two thirds of our country today can be divided into two zones: groundwater scarce zone and acutely groundwater scarce zone. Pretty appalling...isn’t it? But what is more shocking is that we have very little idea about who is using all this water and exactly how much…

agriculturalLet me explain. The consumers can be divided under three heads—domestic, industrial, and agricultural. The government does track their rate of consumption—but the figures that it comes up with just do not look real!! See for yourself…

At home and dry…
Government says householders use just five percent of the total ground water extracted. But in reality at least seventy six per cent of rural household and more than 21 per cent of urban families are completely dependent on groundwater. Because they have no other alternative source.

Take Delhi for instance. Here there is a daily demand of about 3217 million litres--but the supply is only 2271...So where does the rest come from? Sorry…no prizes for guessing the right answer..

IndustryIndustry – the giants
This is the fastest growing area in our economy and also the largest user. But do the government records reflect that? Nah…

dot3.gif (72 bytes) The industrial sector has 30 per cent growth in the five years from 1993 to 1998. But the percentage of groundwater set aside for it by the government remains exactly the same as it was in 1992.

dot3.gif (72 bytes) Thermal power plants need huge volumes of water to run. These have recorded a 10 per cent annual growth rate in the past 10 years. And a large number of them are located in Maharashtra and Gujarat. But according to official records, there has been very little increase in the amount of groundwater used in these states during this time. So where is all the extra water needed for sustaining these industrial units coming from?

Delhi's tap

Actual
supply is only about 2271 million litres

69-1.jpg (2202 bytes) Aberage amount of water required is 3217 million litres per day.

Agriculture—bound to the ground
Certainly the most crucial sector. Not only because it provides livelihood to almost 70 per cent of India’s population. Because today, 60% of the total 50 million hectares of land under cultivation in India, is irrigated by groundwater.

So why is the government still spending billions in building canals and dams—while the farmers are getting more and more dependant on groundwater?

So what do we do?
Now just take a break and go back to the last few pages. And count how many times I have used the word ‘government’. Too, too frequently…right? Exactly. Let’s stop looking at the government to find all the solutions for us. Of course, we need its help and we must get it. But it’s pretty clear. That if we are to attain our right over water, we have to take up some responsibilities ourselves. Hmm…I can see that you are still doubtful. Ok, let me tell you the story of Lapodiya, a village in Rajasthan.

Magic of Lapodiya
It got its name from the word ‘lapod’, which in the local dialect means insane. Till about 25 years ago, anyone who lived in this dry and barren village was considered to be mad by the neighbours. The Lapodiyans are pastoralists—farmers of goats and cattle. But the groundwater table had sunk to such depths here, that the pasturelands had turned into vast tracts of deserts. So the cattle starved and so did the people. Government experts came to test the soil, offered various solutions—but nothing worked. Then Laxman Singh, a young man who lived in Lapodiya, and a group of his friends took over.They realised that the only way the fields could turn green again was by trapping rain—to feed the parched earth. You see, Lapodiya gets very little rainfall, and suffers long bouts of droughts. But even when the precious rains came—the water flowed off the hilly terrains of the village and disappeared within minutes…leaving its lands thirsting for more. What Singh and his team did was to divide the pasturelands into rectangular plots or chaukas and then built small dykes to stop rainwater from running off. So the water stayed in the land—long enough to seep down, underground.

Today,the village has a large population of healthy cattle (feeding on the fodder grown in the transformed pasturelands!). And happy people…who now run a thriving dairy cooperative and who have really worked hard to get their share of water!

 

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