Tag Archives: water conflicts

India, Mumbai: tribals up in arms against five key water supply projects

More than five projects aiming to augment water supply for the growing Mumbai metropolitan region are facing opposition from locals and the tribal population in rural areas. They are demanding that they get water first before going ahead with the projects. The projects, financed by the Mumbai Metropolitan Region Development Authority (MMRDA), involve extending dams or building new ones and the displacement of villages.

In early April 2011, there was a mass protest against the state government’s move to divert water from the Surya irrigation project in Thane to the extended western suburbs of Mumbai.

“We have no issues with Mumbai getting water, but what about the tribals here who do not get water despite having dams in the region. The Surya dam was constructed from the funds meant for tribal development. The state government is spending Rs 1,000 crore [US$ 222 million], but is not ready to invest Rs 20 crore and provide water to the tribals,” said Chintaman Vanga, BJP MLA from Vikramgadh, who is spearheading the agitation here. Almost every dam that will provide water to Mumbai is being built in these tribal belts, but the water woes in the region continue.

Read more: Prashant Rangnekar, Indian Express, 08 Apr 2011

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, Kerala: tribunal to claim US$ 46 million compensation from Coca-Cola

The Kerala state cabinet has set up a Plachimada Claims Tribunal to realise compensation of Rs 216.26 crore (US$ 46.2 million) from Hindustan Coca Cola Beverages Company for the ecological damages it caused Plachimada village in Palakkad district of Kerala.

Photo: India Resource Center

The tribunal was announced on 30 June 2010 in the wake the recommendations of a high powered committee, headed by chief secretary K Jayakumar. It will adjudicate disputes relating to compensation for the damage the company’s cola bottling plant caused in the village by over-exploiting the groundwater resources and discharging pollutants into the water. The sum is meant to compensate Plachimada residents for agricultural losses, health problems and loss of wages, among other things. The plant in Palakkad district was closed in March 2004 following a high court order and loud protests by Plachimada residents.

Kerala chief minister VS Achuthanandan announced the setting up of the tribunal in view of the recommendations of the Jayakumar report submitted in 22 March 2010, saying a tribunal would be needed to force Coca Cola to compensate people for polluting their water resources. “Attempts of Coca Cola to delay and subvert the decisions have been defeated. The government should now ensure that no more Plachimadas are allowed to happen,” said R Ajayan, convener, Plachimada Solidarity Committee.

The committee report stated that ‘the compensation is not to be viewed as a quid pro quo for not initiating criminal charges. Therefore, Government may proceed against the company in accordance with various laws as it has violated a number of provisions.’

The high-level committee had also reported that the company had flouted the provisions of several acts, including the Water Act of 1974, the Environment Protection Act of 1986, the Factories Act of 1948 and the Hazardous Waste Rules of 1989.

In its reaction to the cabinet decision, Hindustan Coca Cola Beverages Pvt Ltd said in a statement that numerous scientific studies and investigations by independent experts and the Kerala Government itself had shown that the plant was not the cause of local water-shed issues.

“We have given our views in the past that the Jayakumar Committee was set up with the pre-determined and unproven conclusion that the operations of the HCCB Pvt Ltd have caused loss to the residents of Plachimada.”

“It is our opinion that any government committee or panel reviewing claims should first determine through an established process of law whether any damage was caused to the residents of Plachimada, and second, if such damage was caused, who was responsible,” the statement said.

For background information on agitation against Coca Cola in India visit the web site of the India Resource Center

Source: Savvy Soumya Misra, Down to Earth, 13 Jul 2010 ; PTI / DNA India, 30 jun 2010

India: director of Anti-Coca Cola documentaries dies in rail accident

Saratchandran

The director of acclaimed documentaries on the Anti-Coca Cola struggle at Plachimada, India, was killed in a railway accident at Nellayi in Thrissur, Kerala.

Filmmaker C. Sarathchandran (53) is especially known for his works ‘Kaippunneeru’ (The Bitter Drink) in 2003 and ‘The Thousand Days and a Dream’ (2006). The films show how a struggle of a few thousand tribal villagers in central Kerala grew into a people’s movement against the most powerful corporate giant in the world, the Coca Cola company.

The American soft-drink company had a bottling plant in Plachimada until 2004, when it was closed down after a successful campaign by activists, who claimed that it was responsible for a drastic decline in the quantity and quality of water available to local farmers and villagers.

The Kerala state government is currently considering an expert committee recommendation to claim Rs 216.26 crore (US$ 48.6 million) in damages from Hindustan Coca-Cola Beverages Ltd.

Sarathchandran was traveling in the Guruvayur-Egmore Chennai Express when he fell onto the track while trying to help a man who slipped from the moving train, police said.

With his documentaries, the filmmaker aimed to raise public awareness on environment issues and people’s struggles in his native Indian state of Kerala.

At the time of his death he was working on documentaries on industrial pollution due to a gelatin factory near Trichur, and a film on the current state of Chaliyar river.

Read the obituary by his friend and director of the School of Media Studies, C S Venkiteswaran.

Source: Deccan Herald, 01 Apr 2010 ; Movies Updated blog, 11 Apr 2010

India, Mumbai: man dies in water protest

One man died in a violent protest against water shortages held outside the headquarters of Mumbai’s municipal corporation BMC (Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation) on 3 December 2009. Insufficient rains have forced the BMC to impose steep water cuts until at least July 2010.

About 1,500 activists from the NGO Swabhimaan, led by its president Nitesh Rane, son of Revenue Minister Narayan Rane, raised slogans for clean and adequate water supply and tried to enter the BMC building. They were met by 500 police.

Viral Dholakia

In the scuffle, 43-year-old Viral Dholakia, state co-ordinator of Swabhimaan, fell to the ground. He was taken to the state-run GT Hospital, where doctors said that he complained of chest pain and breathlessness.

Dholakia died half an hour later, ironically on his birthday. Hospital authorities claimed that he did not die of a lathi (police stick)-charge injury, as there were no visible marks on his body.

Five had sustained major injuries. “This is disgusting. We went to ask for water and got beaten up instead. My family of 10 barely gets water for an hour a day,” said Mohmmad Umar, 50, a businessman, who had injuries all over his body.

“Almost everyday, fights break out in our area over water. There is hardly any water supply and residents fight for every drop,” said Mohmmad Ambir, 35, a Mulund resident who also suffered severe injuries.

[...] Addressing the crowd, Nitesh Rane said, “If the water supply is not restored immediately, we will not allow the Commissioner, Mayor and corporators of the ruling Sena-BJP to walk on the roads.”

[...] The police detained Nitesh and his supporters at Azad Maidan Police Station and later released them on bail.

Protesters came from Vasai, Virara

Swabhimaan managed to get protesters from as far as Vasai and Virar, which do not even fall under BMC’s jurisdiction. The Traffic Department confirmed that the organisation had sought permission to get 75 buses from outside city limits to carry supporters to the protest venue.

Nitesh picked wrong day

Nitesh Rane would have done well to check the schedules of acting municipal commissioner R A Rajeev, Mayor Shraddha Jadhav and additional municipal commissioner Anil Diggikar, who is in-charge of water supply projects, as all these important functionaries were out of the city.

Finding no one else, Nitesh only met AMC A K Singh, in-charge of Education and Security along with eastern suburbs. Rajeev and Jadhav were in New Delhi to receive the prize BMC has won for being the best civic body across the country. Diggikar is on leave as his father has expired.

Is water mafia at work?

Though it cannot be established that any political party supports water mafias who break into the BMC water mains, sources from the civic body allege that the strong lobby has political patronage.

According to an official from BMC, ever since the drive to take action against illegal connections was launched, threat calls to department officials have increased. “Because of our drive, most of the water mafia panicked and we believe that they are trying to put pressure on us by using their political connections.

The lobby is so influential that it has made crores in this business. So, they are protesting in a different manner just to divert public attention,” he alleged.

‘We didn’t order lathi-charge’

“At first, the crowd was quite peaceful, but then they broke the BMC’s security bunkers at the main gate. From there, they headed towards Gate 3. Here, they tried to use brute force to get inside the headquarters. The police who were on duty were shoved around and they lathi-charged in retaliation. None of my officers specifically ordered a lathi charge,” said DCP Zone I Vishwas Nangre-Patil.

Nearly 30 people were injured in the protests outside the BMC HQ. The protests became violent when the mob tried to forcibly enter the BMC but was lathicharged by police. Photo: Bombay Mirror

Senior Inspector Bhaurao Bhawale of the Azad Maidan police station said, “People in the crowd were intent on getting inside the BMC building and damaging government property. We have taken action against those responsible in accordance with the law,” he said.

According to police, 21 persons were arrested and charged under Section 353 (assault or criminal force to deter public servant from discharge of his duty), Section 338 (causing grievous hurt by act endangering life or personal safety of others), Section 341 (wrongful restraint), Section 452 (punishment for assault or criminal force other than on grave provocation) of the Indian Penal Code.

Source: Mumbai Mirror, 04 Dec 2009

India’s water crisis: when the rains fail

Many of India’s problems are summed up in its mismanagement of water, [which includes corruption and unsustainable subsidies]. Now a scanty monsoon has made matters much worse.

[...] Around 450m [Indians] live off rain-fed agriculture, and this year’s monsoon rains, which between June and September provide 80% of India’s precipitation, have been the scantiest in decades. Almost half India’s 604 districts are affected by drought, especially in the poorest and most populous states—such as Bihar, which has declared drought in 26 of its 38 districts. [...] That also means less water for thirsty cities, including Delhi, where 18m people live and the water board meets around half their demand in a good year.

[...] India’s extremes of hydrology, poverty and population present vast difficulties for water management which it has never mastered. [...] Increasingly frequent droughts [...] will accentuate India’s problems, with the monsoon rains, which supply over 50% of much of India’s annual precipitation in just 15 days, predicted to become even more contracted and unpredictable. At the same time, the rapid melting of Himalayan glaciers promises to deprive the great rivers of the Indian sub-continent, the Indus, Ganges and Brahmaputra, of their summertime source. This threatens a triple whammy: of longer dry seasons, in which these rivers do not flow, and more violent wet seasons.

Despite daunting seasonal and regional variations, [India] should have ample water for agricultural, industrial and household use. But most of it falls, in a remarkably short time, in the wrong places. India’s vast task is therefore to trap and store enough water; to channel it to where it is most needed; and, above all, to use it there as efficiently as possible. And on all three counts, India fares badly. Without huge improvements, according to a decade-old official estimate, by 2050, when its population will be a shade under 1.7 billion, India will run short of water.

There are already signs of the conflict this would cause [...] Maharashtra and Karnataka are now furiously building dams and diversions [on the Krishna river] … in Orissa 30,000 farmers laid siege to a reservoir in 2007 to try to stop factories using its waters … Rajasthan has seen similar protests against the diversion of water to its growing cities … in one, five farmers were shot dead by police.

[...] The government’s main solution is to build more large dams and river diversions [...] but given the decrepitude of much of its existing water infrastructure, and its profligate ways with water, its more urgent priorities are to repair and reform.

[But] without expensive maintenance [...] grand dams and irrigation schemes tend to be as inefficient as they are environmentally destructive. And India’s corrupt, underfunded and overmanned state irrigation departments—UP’s, for example, employs over 100,000 people—often provide no maintenance at all. As a result, each year India is estimated to lose the equivalent of two-thirds of the new storage it builds to siltation. Bad planning, often as a result of inter-state rivalries, causes more waste. Thus, between 1992 and 2004 India built 200 large and medium-sized irrigation projects—and the area irrigated by such schemes shrank by 3.2m hectares.

[In] many places, including productive Punjab and Haryana, whose rather well-off farmers also get free or cut-price electricity, the rate of groundwater extraction is unsustainable. Nearly a third of India’s groundwater blocks were defined in 2004 as “critical, semi-critical or over-exploited”. [...] Satellite maps released by America’s NASA last month showed that north-western India’s aquifers had fallen by a foot a year between 2002 and 2008: a loss of 109 cubic km (26 cubic miles) of water.

As bore-holes run dry, as those over the hardrock aquifers of southern-central India do on a monthly basis, many poor people may be deprived of safe drinking water. Currently, 220m Indians lack this. Not all India’s groundwater is potable anyway; in places, it is getting seriously polluted. And India’s groundwater reserves will be especially missed when climate change makes surface-water sources even more sporadic.

Some excuse this resolute destruction by saying that India’s farmers do not understand groundwater. But they know when it is running out.

[But] set against [free water and electricity and government guarantees to purchase rice at a "minimum support price”] Punjab’s efforts to conserve its groundwater, mainly by telling farmers not to transplant paddy before the monsoon rains, are rather puny.

[With] over a quarter of India’s electricity given free or cut-price to farmers [...] state power utilities are bust. [But] two chief ministers who recently tried charging farmers for electricity, in AP and Madhya Pradesh, were kicked out of office.

The subsidy raj is not confined to farmers. Many municipal governments price water well below cost, and therefore struggle to supply it. Delhi, where the water board’s revenues cover only 40% of its operating costs, should have plenty of water. It draws 220 litres per citizen, more than Paris. But half of it disappears from leaky pipes. To mend these, workmen, having no underground maps, must dig up and sift through a tangled mass of pipes and cables.

Predictably, for a couple of hundred rupees a month, posh south Delhi gets the best water supply. When its taps run dry, the locals, including India’s political and bureaucratic elite, pump groundwater—often illegally. By one estimate, bore-holes provide 40% of the capital’s water; and south Delhi’s groundwater [...] is being depleted by up to three metres a year. But tube-wells, which cost around $600, are no option for Delhi’s poor, including 4m slum-dwellers. To augment their supply they must buy water, of dubious quality and at extortionate prices, from a well-connected water mafia.

In fiery June residents of Sangam Vihar, a poor suburb of south Delhi, rioted after getting no water for two weeks. In normal times, according to Vishnu Sharma, a 36-year-old resident, he and his family receive, at unpredictable times, around an hour and a half of muddy piped water each week. They pay $2 for this, he said—and another $20, or a quarter of his factory wage, to private water-sellers in cahoots with corrupt water-board officials. “So why bother complaining?” he said angrily.

Who could deny that rich Delhiites must pay more for water, so the city’s poor can get more? The rich, of course. In 2005 a World Bank-sponsored effort to reform the water board was shot down by local NGOs. As well as worrying, reasonably, about the bidding process for contracts, they were outraged to discover that, in return for round-the-clock clean water, the targeted households would be charged about $20 a month—or what Mr Sharma pays his local water don.

To make farmers use less water, they must pay, or pay more, for electricity. [...] To charge farmers more for electricity, utilities will have to improve supply. And farmers must learn to use water more efficiently.

Selling groundwater to cities, as farmers outside Chennai have done, is one possible answer. Another, to keep up India’s food production, is to spread the use of modern seeds and other technologies—such as an improved system of paddy cultivation that uses half as much water and has boosted yields in Tamil Nadu and AP.

[...] In dry areas, where profligate water-use by one farmer can make many wells run dry, farmers have been persuaded to share information on rainfall, groundwater levels and cropping, and so collectively regulate themselves. One attempt at this in central AP involves 25,000 farmers.

And India must have more dams[but] India’s state governments would do better to concentrate on building and restoring millions of small water storages, tanks and mini-reservoirs, and put local governments in charge of them.

Source: Economist, 10 Sep 2009

Averting Asian water wars

As the most pressing resource, water holds the strategic key to peace, public health and prosperity. [T]he battles of tomorrow will be over water. And nowhere else does that prospect look more real than in Asia, says Brahma Chellaney, professor of strategic studies at the privately funded Center for Policy Research in New Delhi, India.

[...] In Asia, deforestation, poor management of river basins, environmentally unsustainable irrigation, overuse of groundwater and contamination of water sources have all helped aggravate water woes. [...] Saline seawater can flow in to replace the fresh water that has been pumped out, as is happening in some Asian coastal areas. In the Gangetic Delta, wells have tapped into naturally occurring arsenic deposits, leading to tens of millions of people in eastern India and Bangladesh being exposed to high levels of arsenic.

[...] China is toying with massive interbasin and inter-river water transfer projects starting from the Tibetan plateau [which ] threaten to damage the delicate Tibetan ecosystem [and] carry seeds of inter-riparian conflict. [...] Beijing has identified the bend where the Brahmaputra forms the world’s longest and deepest canyon, just before entering India, as holding the largest untapped reserves for meeting China’s water and energy needs.

[...] Asia will continue to have the largest number of people without basic or adequate access to water. Such water stress in the face of rising demand and poor water management [and climate change] will sharpen competition between urban and rural areas, between neighboring provinces and between nations.

[T]he way to forestall or manage water disputes in Asia is to build cooperative river-basin arrangements involving all riparian neighbors.

Source: Brahma Chellaney, Japan Times, 02 Oct 2008

Workshop on Innovations in the Water Sector, 20-23 Jan 2009, Pune, India

Organised by:  Fulbright Indo-American Environmental Leadership Program (F-IAELP) of the United States-India Educational Foundation (USIEF)

Participants will be from research institutes, various ministries under the Government of India, academia and NGOs. Indian and U.S. Fulbrighters will also attend the workshop.

Topics:

  • Conflicts over demand and supply in the water sector.
  • Process/institutional/technological innovations that serve as instruments to bring efficiency, equity and sustainability in the water sector.
  • Case studies to demonstrate wider impacts of innovation on domestic, agricultural and industrial water sector.

Abstract deadline: 31 Aug 2008

For more information go to the USIEF web site