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The decline in the groundwater table is a matter of serious concern for India. To protect, conserve, manage and properly govern the country's groundwater, the Indian government has, since the 1970s, come out with a number of model bills. The individual states have their own legislations to protect and conserve their groundwater. However, due to unregulated extraction, poor management and inadequate recharge of groundwater, the problem is more acute than what one can see on the ground.
International Journal of Water Resources Development, 2002
Overexploitation of groundwater and intensive irrigation in major canal commands has posed serious problems for groundwater managers in India. Depletion of water tables, saltwater encroachment, drying of aquifers, groundwater pollution, water logging and salinity, etc. are major consequences of overexploitation and intensive irrigation. It has been reported that in many parts of the country the water table is declining at the rate of 1-2 m/year. At the same time in some canal commands, the water table rise is as high as 1 m/year. Deterioration in groundwater quality by various causes is another serious issue. Increased arsenic content in shallow aquifers of West Bengal reported recently has created panic among the groundwater users. Summed together, all these issues are expected to reduce the fresh water availability for irrigation, domestic and industrial uses. If this trend continues unchecked, India is going to face a major water crisis in the near future. Realizing this, the Government of India has initiated several protective and legislative measures to overcome the groundwater management-related problems but, due to the lack of awareness and political and administrative will, none of the measures has made any signi cant impact. This paper highlights the critical issues and examines the various schemes related to groundwater development and management.
Sanchar Express, 2017
India is facing a perfect storm in managing water. Centuries of mismanagement, political and institutional incompetence, indifference at central, state and municipal levels, a steadily increasing population to at least 2050 (estimated at 1.7 billion) which will require more and more water for domestic, industrial, agricultural, energy and environmental needs, a rapidly mushrooming middle class demanding an increasingly more protein-rich diet requiring significantly more water to produce, absence of any serious and sustained attempts at central or state levels to manage water quantity and quality, lack of implementation of existing laws and regulations, pervasive corruption and poor adoption rates of new and cost-effective technologies, are only some of the causes why water situations in all the Indian states are likely to continue to become progressively worse.
Current Science
This study reviews groundwater status and management based on the existing literature regarding its resource endowment, hydrogeology, challenges and issues of management and policy suggestions for India. Efficient management requires decoupling groundwater rights from land-ownership rights, changes in electricity pricing and metering, aquifer-based plans for storage and replenishment, and empowerment of participatory irrigation management for local management. Issues of water-food-energy nexus, climate change, carbon footprint of groundwater extraction and virtual water trade are also important for ensuring sustainable management of groundwater resources.
IOSR Journal of Mechanical and Civil Engineering
The present status of groundwater in many States of India has reached to a level of crisis. The solutions of this problem are demanding an urgent attention at many fronts. The distribution of replenishable ground water by river basins is quite skewed and thus national average level of ground water development as 58% of the available potential in the aggregate is misleading. The available data is analysed to define a critical factor as level of groundwater development (in percent) per unit percentage of villages having tubewell irrigation that can be incorporated for available ground water resources for irrigation (in MCM/year). This critical factor for most of the States is quite in agreement with the percentages of the overexploited/critical blocks of the concerned State, except Maharashtra.
2021
The scarcity of freshwater is escalating higher than the predicted level in India alongside the other countries in the world. The surface, subsurface and groundwater resources are gradually reducing in quantity and quality concern. The states and union territories of the western, southern and central India are already severely suffering from the scarcity of freshwater. Rate of groundwater extraction accelerated after the implementation of the green revolution and urban-industrial development. The river's natural flow has been diverted and protected for socioeconomic development. Therefore, the lower riparian states are deadly affected by ecological and hydro-geomorphological perspectives. The fisheries have been widely adopted in those areas as an alternative to traditional crop cultivation, which extract more groundwater for freshwater supply and enhance the rate of groundwater depletion. Moreover, the rainwater recharge into the soil layer as well as in the groundwater table has been gradually reducing due to concretized urban infrastructural development. The surface runoff becomes accelerated, enhancing the soil erosion rate. In India, about 75% of total water bodies have been polluted from domestic wastes. Besides, about 80% of rural people are compelled to use unsafe water, which resulted in the death of more than 700 children per year from diarrhoea. In this situation, India achieves the third place in the world in terms of water export. In such juxtaposition condition, about 60% and 85% of irrigation water and drinking water supply came from the groundwater, respectively. Recently, over 60% of tube wells are malfunctioning due to excessive rate of groundwater depletion. The su ffering of the people is tremendously increasing concerning the availability of drinking water and irrigation water. People are extracting groundwater from the far depth to overcome the crop failure and drinking water problem. But, the severity of water scarcity becomes enhancing year after year in conjunction with global warming and climate change. In this concern, the government has taken different water scarcity preventive measures in individual household level to the regional level. Now, the main motto is to execute the 3-R concept (recycle, reuse and recharge) in association with the other various techniques of water storage (like
International journal of industrial marketing, 2022
The present analysis shows that there is no compatibility between annual rainfall, annual recharge, annual draft, and the number of OCS blocks indicating serious discrepancies in the available information. Apart from this, different groundwater assessments from 2004 show no significant increase in annual groundwater draft, according to a report from the United Nation, groundwater abstraction continued to rise sharply in India. It is also observed that though, there is no significant change in the long-period average annual rainfall of the country, in general, the states in the northwest and central India, like Punjab, Haryana, and Uttar Pradesh are facing a remarkable downward trend in seasonal (monsoonal) and annual rainfalls both. The states of the country's western region, like Rajasthan and Gujrat, are witnessing an upward trend in both seasonal (monsoonal) and annual rainfalls. States of southern India are not much affected. Due to declining rainfall in some of the major food grain-producing states, the balance of water distribution in the country is shifting and it may become more prominent in the years to come. India is already the largest abstractor of groundwater in the world and in the above scenario, there will be tremendous pressure on groundwater in the future. This calls for out-of-the-box solutions for groundwater restoration in India. The suggested actions
Nat. Resources J., 1990
Historically, irrigation tanks served as important sources of groundwater recharge in the hard rock belt of India. Construction and maintenance of irrigation tanks were functionally linked with irrigation wells by groundwater recharge. Farmers voluntarily maintained the tanks because of an established tank maintenance system. Contemporary administrative and political changes have both promoted rapid exploitation of groundwater and discouraged maintenance of the tank systems that had sustained the vital groundwater resource. This commentary discusses India's water-governing institutions, the history of their decay, and the factors responsible for the present groundwater depletion. Corrective policy instruments are proposed to alleviate the problem, including groundwater regulation, electricity pricing controls, a correlative groundwater rights system, and the establishment of groundwater districts.
The Wire
Industries can no longer extract groundwater in India without conducting an environment impact assessment of their extraction activities. In a July 20, 2020, order, the National Green Tribunal NGT, directed the Central Ground Water Authority (CGWA) to stop granting ‘general’ permission for withdrawal of groundwater by commercial entities. The NGT clarified that “any groundwater extraction permission should be for specific times and a specified quantity of water, and not in perpetuity”.
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