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Environment
There is a water crisis in India, but it is particularly pressing in some states more than in others - Madhya Pradesh, for instance. The country's infrastructure for basic supplies of water for drinking and sanitation is seriously wanting, even as urban and industrial water needs increase exponentially with every passing year. In Madhya Pradesh (MP), there is acute shortage of water in 22 of the 48 districts. Short of a complete overhaul of existing supply systems, the solutions are deliverable but necessarily less than adequate. Fortunately, efforts towards water management throughout the state, with support from UNICEF, have started yielding results better than in the past. The water conservation drive initiated by the state government in 2002, called Jalabhishek Abhiyan, is doing well in the rural areas. What has been
nationally recognized is that the future of the country's food security
and the quality of the lives and livelihood of its people depends on the
collective ability to conserve and utilize groundwater resources in an
environmentally-friendly, economically-efficient and socially-equitable
manner. The average rainfall in MP is 800 mm. High rainfall between 1,100-2,200 mm occurs in the Seoni, Balaghat, Umaria, Katni, Sidhi, Panna and Satna districts; low rainfall (below 600 mm) occurs in Ratlam, Ujjain, Barwani, Khargone, Rajgarh, etc. A good part of the land suffers from rock desiccation. A fifth of the state's area is underlain by granite gneisses and meta-sedimentary rocks; a tenth is covered by the Gondwanas, which comprise of sandstone, limestone and marble. Tube-wells and hand-pumps are rendered useless particularly in the summer, when groundwater levels drop below 200 meters in several districts. This is when lakhs of people become dependent on conventional water sources such as ponds, bawalis (step-wells) and rivers. The situation is so chronic that people's representatives have repeatedly raised the water crisis specter in the State Assembly, forcing the government to declare three districts - Panna, Chhattarpur and Tikamgarh - drought-hit immediately after the end of the rainy season. (When did this happen?) The groundwater level has dropped below 150 meters in these districts, for which the government has announced special financial packages for construction of ponds and water transportation facilities. Brijendra Singh Rathore, a legislator, says that the situation in Tikamgarh district worsens every year. Despite average rainfall, nothing much has changed. Merely transporting water from nearby districts is not the solution, he says: rainwater needs to be utilized properly. This problem
is serious enough for the state to have recently gone on a water
conservation drive involving grey-water reuse and rainwater harvesting.
An engineer of the state's Public Health Engineering Department (PHED)
claimed that awareness is being created among citizens towards water
conservation. Technological
simplicity is the keyword. In the state's Dhar and Jhabua districts,
UNICEF and the National Environmental Engineering Research Institute (NEERI),
Nagpur, have designed and implemented water management schemes that are
simple enough to be operated and maintained by children's water safety
clubs. Pinky Bhawar,
a student of class 10 in a government school in Dhar district, who
shares a tribal hostel with 275 other girls, is member of a water safety
club in her hostel. The club not only discusses matters of awareness of
water conservation and reuse, but also helps the hostel maintain the
system and keep it clean. December 24, 2006 By arrangement with Women's Feature Service The Week of December 24, 2006
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