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Three months after a BBC report declared that Bengaluru will be one among 11 cities in the world to reach Day Zero; a government report has now stated that the city will lose its groundwater by 2020.
The list is part of ‘Composite Water Management Index: A Tool for Water Management 2017’ by Niti Aayog. Niti Aayog is a government think tank that promotes co-operative federalism and was the Modi government’s replacement of erstwhile Planning Commission.
“Although 93 percent of India’s urban population has access to basic water, there are still sharp inter-city and intra-city inequities. Further, supply gaps are causing city dwellers to depend on privately extracted ground water, bringing down local water tables.
In fact, by 2020, 21 major cities, including Delhi, Bangalore, and Hyderabad, are expected to reach zero groundwater levels, affecting access for 100 million people, said the report.
The report said that most states have achieved less than 50 percent of the total score in the augmentation of groundwater resources, highlighting the growing national crisis—54 percent of India’s groundwater wells are declining.
The previous year, the state occupied the fifth position, meaning an improvement by one rank in a year.
Though the report does not get into details, it says that critical groundwater resources – which account for 40 percent of our water supply – are being depleted at unsustainable rates.
Niti Aayog has proposed:
Veena Srinivasan, Programme Leader – Water, Land and Society at ATREE (Ashoka Trust for Research in Ecology and the Environment) is of the opinion that the 2020 timeline is alarmist, but added that current groundwater usage in cities like Bengaluru was unsustainable.
She further noted that across the country there was a dearth of regulating authorities.
“For a country like India which takes up about a quarter of the world’s groundwater, there are only 350 officials at the Central Ground Water Board. Out of them, only 200 people are looking and marking aquifers. So there is basically no agency which can do enforcement or check actual usage,” she said.
( Published in an arrangement with The News Minute.)
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