The government of India recently informed the Parliament about high levels of toxic contamination of groundwater. Such pollutants from landfills and industries have been a matter of big worry. These along with pollution of groundwater caused by chemical fertilizers and pesticides have been flagged as major concerns already. Governments need a conclusive policy regime to take care of water woes in India
Groundwater depletion is a major concern the world is facing now. A scientific study published in 2014 found out that India is among the top five countries where groundwater depletion was the highest in the first decade of 21st century. The other countries are United States of America, Iran, Saudi Arabia, and China. This study further found that the rate of global groundwater depletionin the study period (2000-2009) is more than double in comparison to the period between 1960 and 2000. While the global groundwater depletion per year stayed at around 56 km³ (cubic kilometres) per year during 1960-2000, it rose to almost 113 km³ per year during 2000-2009. For India, this figure rose from 21.70 km³ to 43.14 km³. What is more important, about 15 percent of the globally abstracted groundwater was taken from non-renewable groundwater during
this period.
Another important scientific study by researchers from the University of California, analysing data from NASA’s GRACE satellite mission, published in 2015, found a decline in water reserves in 21 of the 37 largest aquifers of the world since 2003 threatening water availability in many regions. For more than two billion people across the world aquifers are the primary water source but the shocking reality is that key groundwater basins in all the inhabited continents are being drained. According to this study, the Ganges also faces a high rate of depleting groundwater caused by dense cities and extensive irrigation.
Cities and groundwater
In India, as per a recent report of the NITI Aayog, 21 cities, including the capital city, will run out of groundwater just in two years. It is estimated that about 50 per cent of urban drinking water is drawn from groundwater sources. The same report puts deaths due to drinking contaminated water at 2 lakh per year.
In this
Even though the government finds groundwater in major parts of the country potable, the World Bank in 2012 had estimated that more than 60
According to the government, at the moment,
It’s alarming.
Recharging surface water, tackling landfill menace
Cities of the country depend on groundwater reserves for almost half of their water
Researchers are of the opinion that despite the land sealing effect of several infrastructural projects that often tend to concretise the urban landscape preventing thereby natural recharge from precipitation, there could actually be an increase in groundwater recharge from leaking wastewater drains, water bodies converted into wastewater pools and leakages from poor on-site sanitation systems. According to the International Association of Hydrogeologists, urbanisation greatly modifies ‘groundwater cycle’ because the reduction consequent upon land
Such modification, according to the association, is in continuous evolution, resulting in changes to the groundwater regime which can seriously reduce the resilience of urban infrastructure. The solution therefore for our cities is to go for green and blue infrastructure, as I have been arguing in this column regularly.
We need to let rainwater seep into