NEW DELHI -- Ranbir Singh still
remembers when the wells in his village on New Delhi's southwestern edge
were filled with sweet-tasting water and livestock drank from the small
ponds that dotted the area.
Now the village has been all but subsumed by Dwarka, a high-rise
satellite city that sprang up in the 1990s on the edge of India's
sprawling capital.
The ponds dried out long ago and are now
filled with rubbish, while over-extraction has caused the groundwater
level to fall so far that industrial pumps are needed to bring water to
the surface.
“Today what you get from underground is not even
drinkable,” the 62-year-old told AFP in Pochanpur, now a hodgepodge of
small-scale construction overshadowed by Dwarka's tower blocks.
“People who still consume it complain of stomach problems, and many
young people in our village suffer from skin problems because of this
water.”
Decades of population growth and uncontrolled urbanization have created a water crisis in India.
The World Resources Institute, a Washington-based research group, says
the national supply is predicted to fall to 50 percent below demand by
2030.
A new U.N. report to be launched in Delhi on Friday ahead
of World Water Day on March 22 will warn of an urgent need to manage the
world's water more sustainably and highlight the problem of groundwater
over-extraction, particularly in India and China.
It says 20
percent of global groundwater sources are already over-exploited and
warns the problem will only become more acute without better management,
with demand expected to rise by 55 percent by 2050.
Contaminated Rivers
Sushmita Sengupta of the Delhi-based Center for Science and Environment
says much more could be done to manage supplies in India.
“Our
lakes and ponds were once a natural way of recharging groundwater, but
they are being destroyed through urbanization,” she said.
“Our
sewage goes untreated, so the rivers are contaminated. We used to be
very good at managing water in India, but we are losing that ability.”
Activist Diwan Singh is campaigning for the city to divert rainwater
drains, which currently flow into the sewage system, to lakes and ponds
in order to replenish the water table.
The 44-year-old experienced Delhi's
water woes first hand when he moved into a tower block in Dwarka, which
like many parts of the capital receives no piped water and has to rely
on tanker deliveries and borewells.
“Delhi's groundwater management has been dismal,” complained Singh, who
says he faces an uphill struggle against a slow-moving and sometimes
corrupt bureaucracy.
“In some areas around Dwarka, the
groundwater level has fallen by 60 meters. Meanwhile all the water that
falls in the monsoon is being drained into the sewers and lost.”
The result is that in many parts of Delhi the groundwater contains such a
high concentration of impurities that it is undrinkable.
'People get very angry'
A few kilometers away from Dwarka's modern high-rises in the
working-class suburb of Kailash Puri, life revolves around the city
water board's twice-weekly deliveries.
Residents used to drink
water drawn from the ground with borewells, but that is now too toxic,
and few can afford the expensive water purifiers that are a standard
feature of Delhi's wealthier households.
As the water board's
brightly colored trucks roll down the street, entire families including
small children dash out of their homes with plastic containers to fill.
“I was supposed to be at a job interview today, but I had to miss it
because the water was coming,” said 22-year-old Neha Rana as she filled
her buckets.
“It doesn't matter what's going on, you have to come
and get the water. At times people get very angry, and fights can break
out.”
No one at the Delhi water board would speak to AFP on the
record, but an official speaking on condition of anonymity said this was
a national crisis and could not be resolved at the state level.
“It is an issue that needs concerted, long-term planning at the national level,” he said.
The issue has become so big in Delhi that providing free water was one
of new Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal's key campaign promises in state
elections last month.
In the meantime, private water “mafias” are catering for demand unmet by the government — at a price.
Many source their water from illegal borewells, exacerbating the
problem, and there have been reports they collude with water board
officials to create an artificial shortage.
“They can recharge
their pockets but they can't recharge the groundwater,” said Singh, the
Dwarka campaigner, as he looked despondently at the empty pond in the
park near his home.
Wednesday, March 25, 2015
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