26 April 2025: The Hindu Editorial Analysis
1. A grim picture of India’s water reality
(Source – The Hindu, Page 7 (Op-Ed), 26 April 2025)
Topic: GS Paper 2 – Governance and Public Policy |
Context |
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1. India’s Water Crisis: Current Scenario
- Per Capita Water Availability:
Has declined from 5,177 cubic meters/year in 1951 to 1,486 cubic meters/year in 2021 — dangerously close to water-stressed classification (<1700 m³/year). - Groundwater Depletion:
India is the largest extractor of groundwater globally, using more groundwater annually than the U.S. and China combined. - Urban Water Stress:
21 Indian cities, including Delhi, Bengaluru, and Chennai, are expected to run out of groundwater by 2030 according to NITI Aayog.
(Source: NITI Aayog Water Report)
2. Structural and Governance Failures
- Fragmented Institutional Framework:
Overlapping responsibilities between Central Water Commission, State Water Boards, Urban Local Bodies — leading to poor coordination. - Policy-Implementation Gap:
Despite policies like the National Water Policy (2012) and Atal Bhujal Yojana, outcomes have been sub-optimal. - Lack of Public Awareness and Behavioral Change:
Water conservation is still not a mass movement except in isolated successful cases (e.g., Rajasthan’s traditional johads revival).
3. Impact of Climate Change on Water Availability
- Erratic Rainfall Patterns:
Increase in frequency of floods and droughts; monsoon becoming more intense but shorter in duration. - Shrinking Glaciers:
Himalayan glaciers feeding major rivers like Ganga, Brahmaputra are retreating faster, threatening long-term water security.
(Source: IPCC Report + IMD Data)
4. Regional Disparities in Water Stress
- Punjab, Haryana:
Facing critical groundwater over-exploitation — over 70% of blocks are ‘dark zones’. - Bundelkhand, Marathwada:
Perennial drought-prone zones, leading to mass migration and agrarian distress. - Eastern States (Bihar, Odisha, Assam):
Suffer from annual floods despite abundant water — due to poor drainage and mismanagement.
5. Solutions and Way Forward
A. Demand-Side Management
- Promote water-efficient agriculture (like drip irrigation, crop diversification).
- Incentivize less water-intensive crops (shift from paddy/sugarcane to millets, pulses).
B. Urban Water Reforms
- Rainwater harvesting mandatory in cities.
- Rejuvenate urban lakes, ponds as decentralized reservoirs.
C. Groundwater Regulation
- Implement strict licensing and monitoring for groundwater extraction.
- Use smart metering for agricultural and industrial groundwater use.
D. Strengthen Climate Resilience
- Expand coverage under State Action Plans on Climate Change (SAPCCs) to include micro-level water stress management.
E. Public Participation
- Replicate success models like Hiware Bazar (Maharashtra) and Ralegan Siddhi at the village level.
Conclusion
India’s looming water crisis is not merely a resource issue; it is a governance, equity, and survival issue. Without urgent structural reforms, better federal coordination, climate-adaptive planning, and mass behavioral change, India risks catastrophic social and economic consequences. Water security must be prioritized at par with energy and food security for sustainable national development.
Practice Question: “India’s water crisis is as much a result of mismanagement and policy failure as it is of environmental factors. Critically examine. Also, suggest a multi-pronged strategy for ensuring water security in India.” (250 words / 15 marks) |
Read more – 25 April 2025 : The Hindu Editorial Analysis