What is the issue?
- Cape Town in South Africa is facing the prospect of all its taps running dry by June-July this year.
- This is a wake up call for stakeholders across the globe to assess practices of water usage.
What is the looming water crisis?
- According to the United Nations, 2.1 billion people lack access to safely managed drinking water services.
- Water scarcity already affects 4 out of every 10 people.
- 90% of all natural disasters are water related.
- Nearly 3 lakh children under five die every year from diarrhoeal diseases.
- 80% of wastewater flows back into the ecosystem without being treated or reused.
- Meanwhile, the demand for water in urban areas is projected to increase by 50-70% in the next 3 decades.
What is the New Agenda for Water Action?
- A crisis as that of Cape Town is looming large in other cities in the world as people continue to be reckless in their use of water.
- 12 world leaders (11 heads of state and a special adviser of a high-level panel on water) wrote an open letter to global leaders recently.
- They warned that the world is facing a water crisis and issued a New Agenda for Water Action.
- It observed the need to make “every drop count” and called for a new approach.
- The panel called for rethinking how people understand, value and manage water as a precious resource.
- It also demands catalysing change and building partnerships to achieve the water-related goals of Sustainable Development.
- The social, cultural, economic and environmental values of water to society need to be reassessed.
- Water needs to be allocated in ways which maximize overall benefits to societies.
- It mentioned the need to put in place policies to allow for at least a doubling of water infrastructure investment in the next 5 years.
- It called for governments, communities, the private sector, and researchers to collaborate.
What is India's water scenario?
- In India, Bengaluru is ranked second in the list of 11 global cities which might face the threat of running out of drinking water.
- According to a forecast by the Asian Development Bank, India will have a water deficit of 50% by 2030.
- Although India receives an average rainfall of 1,170 mm per year, it is estimated that only 6% of rainwater is stored.
- India’s water needs are thus primarily met by rivers and groundwater.
- Water scarcity can lead to disastrous consequences impacting food production as most of the farming is rain-fed.
- Ground water caters to about 60% of the country’s irrigation, 85% of rural drinking water requirements and 50% of urban water needs.
- This signifies the importance of according top priority for replenishing the aquifers.
- Millions across India still do not have access to safe drinking water.
- Some of the notable challenges and concerns include:
- growing population
- lack of adequate planning
- crumbling infrastructure
- indiscriminate drilling of borewells
- large-scale consumption of water
- false sense of entitlement in using water carelessly
What are the possible measures?
- The World Bank’s Water Scarce Cities Initiative seeks to promote an integrated approach.
- It aims at managing water resources and service delivery in water-scarce cities as the basis for building climate change resilience.
- Putting in place an efficient piped supply system (without leakage of pipes) has to be top on the agenda.
- Ancient India had well-managed wells and canal systems.
- The Indus Valley Civilization had a well-managed canal system, while Chanakya’s Arthashastra also talks of irrigation.
- Indigenous water harvesting systems need to be revived and protected at the local level.
- Micro irrigation practices like drip and sprinkler systems have to be promoted in a big way for efficient water use in agriculture.
- Digging of rainwater harvesting pits must be made mandatory for all types of buildings, both in urban and rural areas.
- Sustained measures should be taken to prevent pollution of water bodies and contamination of groundwater.
- Ensuring proper treatment of domestic and industrial waste water is also essential.
Source: The Hindu