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India's groundwater governance is in better shape
- India, with nearly 18% of the world’s population, occupies about 2.4% of the total geographical area and consumes 4% of total water resources.
- Indian cities cater to about 48 % of their water supply from groundwater.
- Over the last 50 years, the number of borewells has grown from 1 million to 20 million, making India the world’s largest user of groundwater.
- India’s rapidly growing economy and population are straining its groundwater resources, which could lead to adverse economic and ecological impacts.
Importance of groundwater
- Groundwater is the backbone of India’s agriculture and drinking water security in rural and urban areas.
- Groundwater fulfils India’s 80% drinking water needs and 6 % of irrigation needs.
- The theme of UN World Water Day 2022 was ‘Groundwater, Making the Invisible Visible’ is a reflection of the importance given to the resource across the globe.
- It is important to ensure source sustainability to provide safe drinking water to all rural households by 2024, under the Jal Jeevan Mission.
Government’s effort for conservation of Groundwater
- Initiatives have been taken for the effective management and regulation of groundwater.
- Examples are Atal Bhujal Yojana (ABY) and National Project on Aquifer Management (NAQUIM):
- With the goal of “participatory groundwater management”, ABY looks to inculcate behavioural change made possible by incentivization.
- NAQUIM aims to help gather authentic data and enable informed decision-making.
- A Heli-borne-based survey has been used along with traditional exploratory methods for rapid and accurate aquifer mapping.
- There are around 65,025 groundwater monitoring stations in India, which include 7,885 automated stations.
- The numbers are set to go beyond 84,000; in this, the number of automated stations will rise to over 35,000, with a special focus on identifying high groundwater-extracting industrial and urban clusters and groundwater-stressed regions.
- Dynamic groundwater assessments will be done annually now and a groundwater estimation committee formed to revise the assessment methodology.
- A software named ‘India-Groundwater Resource Estimation System (IN-GRES)’ has been developed.
- The government launched the app Jaldoot to capture data on groundwater tables.
- As per Groundwater assessment in 2022:
- A time-bound and scientific approach is being adopted to monitor precious water resources.
- There has been a 3% reduction in the number of ‘overexploited’ groundwater units and a 4% increase in the number of ‘safe’ category units as compared to 2017.
- There is reduction in annual extraction of 9.53 billion cubic meters.
- There is also reduction in irrigation (208.49 BCM), industrial (3.64 BCM) and domestic water (27.05 BCM) use.
- 9.37 BCM of additional groundwater potential was created through artificial water conservation structures.
Challenges
- Unregulated extraction: No limit on how much groundwater should extract
- Excessive irrigation: Groundwater levels are hitting a low level at a rapid rate.
- Lack of a comprehensive and integrated land use planning framework.
- Poor knowledge of groundwater management systems
- Groundwater pollution: Central Ground Water Board shows that groundwater across 21 states has arsenic contamination.
- Accelerated population growth: Increased demand for water because of a large population.
- A large number of unaccounted and unregulated private water wells
- Ineffective and insufficient legal and regulatory mandate
Looking ahead
- Need to focus on the Integrated Water Resource Management framework.
- It promotes the coordinated development and management of water, land, and related resources.
- Adopting water-sensitive urban design and planning can help maintain the water cycle by managing groundwater, surface water, and rainwater for water demand and supply.
- Provision for wastewater recycling and its reuse to promote the circular economy of one water cycle.
- It will help in source sustainability and groundwater pollution mitigation.
- Interventions like rainwater harvesting, stormwater harvesting, rain garden, and bio-retention ponds that intercept rainfall with vegetated land are low-maintenance alternatives to conventional systems.
- These will help in groundwater recharge.
- The strengthening of regulatory frameworks and stakeholder participation needs to be formulated and imposed.
- Aquifer characterization and robust monitoring of groundwater quality, as well as quantity, are imperative.
- Data collection and formulation of effective regulatory legal policies, laws, and acts for better management will go a long way.
The groundwater resource assessment report 2022 shows a brighter future for groundwater situations in the country. However, with an increasing population necessary step must be taken to make India a water-surplus nation. With help of good policies and various initiatives on groundwater in India, the government will be able to achieve sustainable goals early.