Category Archives: Water collection

India: govt plans to tackle groundwater over-exploitation

The government is planning to regulate over-extraction of groundwater in agriculture and industry which is seriously affecting drinking water supply in rural India, new Rural Development Minister Jairam Ramesh said.

“80 per cent of drinking water supply schemes of rural India are depending on groundwater sources and these sources are drying up due to unregulated over-extraction of water for industry and irrigation,” Ramesh told PTI. “It is a serious issue. We are planning to regulate over-extraction of groundwater for irrigation and industry”.

Drinking water supply schemes are being affected as perennial water sources are becoming seasonal. They are also face pollution by naturally occurring arsenic and fluoride, and by leaching or fertilisers, untreated industrial effluent and sewage.

Source: PTI, MSN News, 17 Jul 2011

Nepal, Kathmandu: water board to curb rampant groundwater extraction

The Kathmandu Valley Water Supply Management Board (KVWSMB) is going to establish 30 monitoring centres throughout the Kathmandu Valley to curb rampant groundwater extraction. The centres, which are coming into operation by mid-May 2011, will monitor the quality and quantity of groundwater.

Both individuals and institutions that extract groundwater for commercial purposes will need to apply for a license from the KVWSMB after the monitoring centres are established. There are currently over 500 tubewells operating in the Kathmandu Valley. However, only 100 of them are registered at the board. Kathmandu Upatyaka Khanepani Limited (KUKL) already extracts a large amount of groundwater from 70 tube wells and supplying the water to its consumers. According to KUKL, the daily water demand in the Kathmandu Valley at present is 320 million litres but the supply is only around 70 million litres in the dry season and 120 million litres in the wet season.

Source: Nagarik / NGO Forum, 30 Mar 2011

India, Andhra Pradesh: “All for a pail of water”

Tribal women drawing water

Photo: G.N.Rao, The Hindu

Photo: G.N. Rao, The Hindu

These extraordinary photos were published last year, March 2010, on International Women’s Day in The Hindu here and here . They show a group of tribal women drawing water from an agricultural well at Govind Tanda in Karepalli mandal (division) of Khammam District, Andhra Pradesh.

Thanks to V. Madhusudana Rao of Access Livelihoods Foundation for the tip.

India: S.M. Sehgal Foundation wins “3rd National Ground Water Augmentation Award – 2009”

S.M. Sehgal Foundation received the 3rd National Ground Water Augmentation Award-2009 on the occasion of World Water Day 2011. The award, instituted by the Ministry of Water Resources, Government of India, is given for “innovative practices of groundwater augmentation through rainwater harvesting and artificial recharge.” S.M. Sehgal Foundation is the winner in the category for Best NGO, Northern zone (covering Jammu & Kashmir, Himachal Pradesh, Punjab, Haryana, Delhi, Uttar Pradesh, Uttaranchal and Chandigarh).

Mr. Jay Sehgal of NGO S.M. Sehgal Foundation receiving the award from Honourable Minister of Water Resources Mr. Salman Khurshid. Photo: IRRAD

The S.M. Sehgal Foundation, through its Institute of Rural Research and Development (IRRAD), has built rainwater harvesting systems in Mewat District and Gurgaon in Haryana state. The water management programme of IRRAD’s Natural Resource Management Center focuses on improving water availability and quality, promoting safe drinking water and its judicious use, proper wastewater disposal, salinity regression, and research and innovation.

Web site: S.M. Sehgal Foundation / IRRAD

Source: S.M. Sehgal Foundation, 22 Mar 2011

India, Bangalore: rainwater harvesting deadline extended

The Karnataka state Legislative Assembly has extended the deadline making it mandatory for citizens in Greater Bangalore to install rainwater harvesting (RWH) systems. The extension, as drawn up in the Bangalore Water Supply and Sewerage (Amendment) Bill 2011, was approved unanimously by the assembly on 13 January 2011.

In 2009, the state government introduced a bill making RWH compulsory for existing buildings with an area of not less than 223 square metres and for new planned buildings with an area of not less 111 than 1200 square metres. The original deadline of 29 May 2010 has now been extended as “people were finding it difficult to meet”.

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Sri Lanka: Treasuring every rain drop

Let not a drop of water that falls from the sky flow into the sea….

These were the words of Parakramabahu, a 13th century Sri Lankan monarch who constructed the Sea of Parakrama,a massive rainwater harvesting reservoir, which to this day irrigates vast stretches of paddy fields in the Gal Oya district of the country.

Rainwater harvesting has gained in popularity throughout the island in the past decades. It is a technique of conservation in which rainwater is harvested form roof and ground catchments, safely stored in special tanks and used when the rains fail. Sri Lankan archeologists have discovered a whole network of storage reservoirs, pools, artificial streams and fountains in the north and central regions of the country proving that rainwater has been an integral part of the irrigation system of the country.

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Bangladesh, Dinajpur: 3,000 villagers stage water protest

A ground water resource conflict culminated in a mass protest as nearly 3,000 villagers besieged a power plant in northern Bangladesh. The villagers threatened to cut the electricity supply to the water cooling system of the Barapukuria power plant in Dinajpur. They claimed that the plant’s excessive withdrawal of groundwater had left hundreds of village tubewells dry.

Fourteen pumps at Sherpur village, around one kilometre off the plant, lift 1,300 tonnes of underground water every hour for operation of the 250 megawatt plant, insiders say.

[...]

The villagers now have to collect drinking water from distant areas and use tainted water released by the power plant for shower and washing, they claimed, adding that skin diseases are spreading in all the nearby villages.

A meeting between the villagers and the plant’s Chief Engineer failed to yield an agreement. The villagers now plan to stage another protest on 26 October 2010.

The chief engineer of the power plant said he formed a five-member committee in late August [2010] to conduct a survey over the persisting water crisis at the surrounding villages.

After completing the survey he would send the report to the ministry concerned and Bangladesh Power Development Board for a possible remedy, he added.

The water released by the plant is harmful to public health and is widely spreading skin diseases, say health officials. But the authorities claim they are releasing water after treating it inside the plant.

Source: Daily Star, 15 Aug 2010

India: drought forces talk of user fees, rainwater harvesting

A record heat wave and growing water crisis in India are forcing politicians to consider implementing user fees and other measures to conserve water.

[R]ecord high temperatures in several areas have been blamed for dozens of deaths across the country. Drying rivers are causing regional water shortages. And in Nagpur, an urban area of 2.4 million in central India, the heat wave has triggered a fuel crisis as rail wagons that normally transport petroleum have been pressed into service to carry water instead.

To cope, the Indian government is drafting a new water policy that could create user fees for water-intensive sectors, such as agriculture, to deal with the crisis. Montek Singh Ahluwalia, the deputy chairman of the government panel drafting the new policy, said that nearly 80 percent of the country’s water goes to agriculture, but estimated that the figure could be reduced to 50 percent.

In Pune, the country’s eighth largest city, the Green Energy foundation, a locally-based environmental non-profit, is urging the government to encourage greater harvesting of rainwater, which the foundation estimates could provide 21 percent of the eastern city’s water needs. A foundation-prepared report for their proposal criticizes the municipality for poor water management and notes that the city faces a 30 percent cut in its water use.

Source: Steve Kellman, Circle of Blue, 10 Jun 2010

Bangladesh: ponds ’caused arsenic’ contamination, MIT study says

Man-made ponds may be responsible for widespread arsenic contamination of ground water affecting millions of people in Bangladesh, a new study says [1].

Rebecca Neumann hangs off the end of bamboo scaffolding built at the field site. Assisted by a man hired from a nearby village, she is connecting a tube that will run from the surface water in the rice field up to a higher point on the scaffolding. Photo: Sarah Jane White, MIT

Researchers in MIT’s Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering believe they have pinpointed a pathway by which arsenic may be contaminating the drinking water in Bangladesh, a phenomenon that has puzzled scientists, world health agencies and the Bangladeshi government for nearly 30 years.

The research suggests that human alteration to the landscape, the construction of villages with ponds, and the adoption of irrigated agriculture are responsible for the current pattern of arsenic concentration underground.

In 2002, a research team led by Charles Harvey, the Doherty Associate Professor of Civil and Environmental Engineering at MIT, had determined that microbial metabolism of organic carbon was mobilizing the arsenic off the soils and sediments, and that crop irrigation was almost certainly playing a role in the process. But the exact sources of the contaminated water have remained elusive, until now.

Around 25m people in the country have been exposed to arsenic through water. Experts have described the situation as the worst mass poisoning of a population in history.

Man-made ponds – often dug with the help of international aid agencies – were originally created to protects villagers from unclean water.

The arsenic enters water supplies from agricultural and industrial waste or from natural deposits in the ground.

A Bangladeshi farmer shows the effects of arsenic poisoning. Photo: BBC

Around two million people in Bangladesh suffer from arsenic poisoning. Chronic ingestion of small doses has been linked to cancer of the bladder, kidney, lung or skin, while large doses can kill immediately.

Arsenic contamination of ground water is a global problem and has occurred in other countries such as Argentina, Chile, China, India, Mexico, Taiwan, Thailand and the United States.

But the gravity of the contamination in Bangladesh is unprecedented. Millions of Bangladeshis knowingly poison themselves because there is often no alternative water source. Harvey estimates that the incidence of death from arsenic-induced cancer will rise to approximately 3,000 cases per year if consumption of contaminated water continues.

Scott Fendorf, a professor at Stanford University who studies arsenic content in soils and sediments along the Mekong River in Cambodia, says Harvey’s previous research, published in 2002, “transformed the scientific community’s outlook on the problem.”

The current work, he adds, has two big ramifications: “It shows that human modifications are impacting the arsenic content in the groundwater; and that while the rice cropping system appears to be buffering the arsenic, the ponds excavated to provide fill to build up the villages are having a negative impact on the release of arsenic.”

Harvard scientist and co-author of the study Rebecca Neumann said that arsenic contamination could be avoided by digging deeper drinking water wells below the ponds.

Charles F. Harvey. Photo: MIT

Harvey and a team of environmental scientists and physicians are making plans for a multi-year study that would provide deep wells for two villages in Bangladesh whose inhabitants suffer from arsenic poisoning. There they would combine continual testing of the well water and hydrogeological modeling of the groundwater system with a study of how the clean water effects the villagers’ health, placing special emphasis on the neurological development of children.

“There are all sorts of studies to show how arsenic hurts people. We’re trying to turn it around and show how removal of the arsenic will help them,” says Harvey.

[1] Neuman, R.B. … [et al.] (2009). Anthropogenic influences on groundwater arsenic concentrations in Bangladesh. Nature Geoscience. Published online: 15 November 2009 | doi:10.1038/ngeo685

Source: BBC, 15 Nov 2009 ; ScienceDaily, 15 Nov 2009; MIT, 15 Nov 2009

Nepal, Mustang: India funds monastic school water supply in sensitive area near Tibet

During a visit to Mustang, Indian Ambassador Rakesh Sood inaugurated a new water tank for a monsatic school, the Shree Mahakaruna Sakyapa Vidyalaya in Lomangthan, Upper Mustang. A Maoist newspaper claimed that the real reason for Sood’s visit was to spy on China.

The Government of India had earlier provided a grant of NRs. 2.51 crores [US$ 341,000] for the construction of school building, hostel, monk’s quarter and teacher’s quarter, which was completed in October, 2006. India has now provided additional grant of NRs.10.88 lakhs [US$ 15,000] for the construction of a water tank to to solve to school’s water supply problem. The project is funded under the India-Nepal Economic Cooperation Programme, which has an outlay over 2560 crores.

Ambassador Rakesh Sood. Photo Embassy of India, Kathmandu, Neapal

Mustang, Nepal’s northernmost district, was part of an ancient Tibetan kingdom in the past and shares a border with Tibet. In the past, after China invaded Tibet, the Buddhist kingdom’s Khampa soldiers loyal to the Dalai Lama had waged a guerrilla war against the Chinese rulers from Mustang.

China remains anxious about Mustang and in the recent past, the Chinese ambassador to Nepal, Qiu Guhong, had also visited the district.

“A jumbo Indian team including envoy Rakesh Sood arrived in the mountainous district of Mustang Friday to spy on China in the name of inspecting the progress of the development projects funded by the Indian government,” Nepali daily Janadisha, the Maoist mouthpiece, said. It also said that the team was in Mustang to assess the influence of the Chinese government in the area.

The ambassador, who was scheduled to go trekking in Mustang after the handover ceremonies, however cut his visit short and headed for Kathmandu Tuesday. It was not known immediately if his return was the fallout of the Maoist propaganda.

Source: Embassy of India in Nepal, 13 Oct 2009 ; Times of India, 13 Oct 2009