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Dams in India did more harm than good, says UN Water report
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SME Times News Bureau | 20 Mar, 2018
Sounding a warning that over
five billion people across the globe may run into water shortage, a
United Nations report has pointed out that dams in India have done more
harm than good to the cause of water security.
Suggesting natural
solutions to handle the water crisis, the UN World Water Development
Report, 2018, notes that large-scale water development projects have led
to major impacts like human displacement, and achieved only limited
food security -- one of the main objectives of such projects.
The
report lays emphasis on the importance of "nature-based solutions" to
meet the crisis, and calls for ancestral and indigenous solutions.
"The
World Commission on Dams country study on India concluded that a
century or more of large-scale water development had resulted in major
social and ecological impacts, including substantial human displacement,
soil erosion and widespread waterlogging while, contrary to stated
objectives, achieving only limited food security benefits," the report
states.
With India being world's largest extractor of ground
water, followed by the US, China, Iran and Pakistan -- together
accounting for 67 per cent of total abstractions worldwide, the report
stated that even the water-rich high flood-prone regions like Gangetic
basins are facing groundwater depletion.
Water withdrawals for
irrigation purposes have been identified as the primary driver of
groundwater depletion worldwide, according to the report. About 800
cubic-km water is extracted globally for irrigation.
"Even though
large-scale groundwater recharge programmes have been operating in
India for decades, the focus has been on water-scarce areas, with no
real emphasis on flood risk management. Highly flood-prone basins such
as the Ganges are now showing clear signs of groundwater depletion," the
report says.
Warning conflicts over water, the report stresses
that global food production by 2050 has to double to feed an estimated
nine billion population. Currently, almost 800 million people are hungry
across the world.
"Currently, an estimated 3.6 billion people
(nearly half the global population) live in areas that are potentially
water-scarce at least one month per year. This population could increase
to some 4.8 to 5.7 billion by 2050," it says.
"The stakes are
high," it says, pointing out that with two-thirds of forests and wetland
lost globally, "soil is eroding and deteriorating in quality".
Since the 1990s, water pollution has worsened in almost all rivers in Africa, Asia and Latin America.
"We also know that water scarcity can lead to civil unrest, mass migration, and even to conflicts within and between countries."
Pushing
for watershed and water harvesting projects on a larger scale, the
report acknowledges India's efforts to generate awareness among
communities on "ancestral survival systems", which talk of ancient ways
to ensure water security.
The report also hails the success of
solution presented by NGO Tarun Bharat Sangh -- led by India's Waterman
Rajendra Singh -- which is credited to have brought water back to 1,000
drought-stricken villages in Rajasthan.
Through small-scale water
harvesting structures in Rajasthan, the NGO successfully revived five
rivers, recharged ground water level by six meters and increased
agriculture production by 20 to 80 per cent.
"These solutions can
also contribute to other aspects of sustainable development, from
ensuring food security and reducing disaster risk to building
sustainable urban settlements and boosting decent work," the report
notes.
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