India's Water Economy, Bracing for a Turbulent Future
A draft World Bank
report, India’s Water Economy:
Bracing for a Turbulent Future, by John
Briscoe, Senior Water Advisor at the World Bank,
examines the challenges facing India’s water sector and
suggests critical measures to address them. The report is based on 12 papers
commissioned by the World Bank from prominent Indian practitioners and policy
analysts.
Crumbling
Water Infrastructure and Depleting Groundwater
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India’s
past investments in large water infrastructure have yielded spectacular results
with enormous gains in food security and in the reduction of poverty. However,
much
of this infrastructure is now crumbling. Shortfalls in
financing have led to an enormous backlog of maintenance. The implicit
philosophy has been aptly described as Build-Neglect-Rebuild. Much of what
currently masquerades as "investment" in irrigation or municipal water supply is
in fact a belated attempt to rehabilitate crumbling infrastructure.
Faced with poor water
supply services, farmers and urban dwellers alike have resorted to helping
themselves by pumping out groundwater through tubewells. Today, 70 percent
of India’s irrigation needs
and 80 percent of its domestic water supplies come from groundwater. Although
this ubiquitous practice has been remarkably successful in helping people to
cope in the past, it has led to rapidly declining water tables and critically
depleted aquifers, and is no longer sustainable.
A number of areas are
already in crisis situations: among these are the most populated and
economically productive parts of the country. Estimates reveal that by
2020, India’s demand for water
will exceed all sources of supply. Notwithstanding the
catastrophic consequences of indiscriminate pumping of groundwater, government
actions – including the provision of free power – have exacerbated rather than
addressed the problem.
Growing Water
Conflicts
On the international
front, India has clearly demarcated
water rights with Pakistan through the Indus
Waters Treaty. Nationally, promising innovations on entitlements are visible in
Noida, Ghaziabad, and Delhi which bought
water rights from the state of Uttar Pradesh (UP) by financing the lining
of canals in UP and in the city of Chennai where water rights were leased from
the state’s farmers.
Climate
Change Worsens the Scenario
Sewage and waste water
from rapidly growing cities and effluents from industries have turned many
rivers, including major ones, into fetid sewers. Massive investments are needed
in sewers and wastewater treatment plants to protect people’s health and improve
the environment.
Climate change
projections show that India’s water problems are
only likely to worsen. With more rain expected to fall in fewer days and the
rapid melting of glaciers – especially in the western Himalayas – India will need to gear up
to tackle the increasing incidence of both droughts and floods.
Massive
Investments Needed
New infrastructure
needs to be built especially in underserved areas such as the water-rich
northeast of the country where investments can transform water from a curse to a
blessing. Furthermore India, desperately short of
power in peak periods, has utilized only about 20 percent of its economically
viable hydropower potential, as compared to 80 percent in developed
countries. The country needs to invest in water infrastructure at all levels –
from large multipurpose water projects to small community watershed management
and rainwater harvesting projects.
Gearing
Up for Tomorrow
Importantly, India
cannot have a secure water future unless there are drastic changes in the way
the state functions. Past attention to infrastructure development has to be
complemented with present attention to water resource and infrastructure
management. And, policies and practices have to come to grips with the
challenges of the future.
The state needs to
surrender those tasks which it does not need to perform and to develop the
capacity to do the many things which only the state can do. Competition needs to
be introduced in the provision of basic public water services, bringing in
cooperatives and the private sector. The state can then focus on financing
public goods such as flood control and sewage treatment and play the role of
regulator to balance the interests of users.
The state has to
define water entitlements at all levels, improve the quality and quantity of
data and make these data available to the public, and has to stimulate the
formation of user groups at all levels – the river basin, the aquifer, and the
irrigation district.
The report was discussed by
leading experts in New Delhi on October 5,
2005.
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