18 June,2019 04:30 PM IST | Mumbai | mid-day online correspondent
Representational picture
India, which depends almost completely on the annual monsoons, currently faces the most severe water crisis in the annals of its known history. A recent report by NITI Aayog predicted that as many as 21 cities in the country will see the total depletion of their groundwater by as early as 2020.
Even today, our cities run dry like clockwork during summers. Nevertheless, there is still not enough awareness about the simple solution of rainwater harvesting in India. Can we really afford to neglect this straightforward solution any longer? Santhosh Kumar, Vice Chairman, ANAROCK Property Consultants disects the rain water harvesting issue.
In Bangalore, the Bangalore Water Supply and Sewerage Board (BWSSB) has mandated that every structure built on 30x40 sq ft and above and old buildings built on 40x60 sq ft above should install rainwater harvesting. In case anybody fails to do so, he/she must pay a penalty every month. Interestingly, despite its annual water woes, Bangalore gets ample rainfall.
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Chennai in Tamil Nadu is among the leaders in rainwater harvesting and boasts of several successful examples of water conservation. Rainwater harvesting is compulsory in the city, and fresh designs for rainwater harvesting structures have been incorporated into the Tamil Nadu Combined Development and Building Rules, 2019. As a notable example, residents of 56 apartments of the Sabari Terrace Complex in Sholinganallur, Chennai planned, designed and implemented a rainwater harvesting structure to collect rainwater on their own terraces.
In Delhi, the Ministry of Urban Development and Poverty Alleviation has made it mandatory for all new buildings on plots of 100 sq. meters and above to provide for water harvesting through storing of water runoff including rainwater.
In rural Maharashtra, Shirpur - once an arid, drought-stricken area - has literally turned green due to the adoption of rainwater harvesting. Known as a green district today, Shirpur has - almost solely through the efforts of its residents - built rainwater harvesting systems and small dams to cultivate three to four crops a year.
Major cities like Delhi, Mumbai, Bangalore, Hyderabad as well as tier 2 cities such as Chandigarh, Indore, Surat and Nagpur do have laws regarding rainwater harvesting. However, it is not good enough for such rules existing just on paper. If the concerned authorities fail to check regularly to ensure their on-ground implementation, rules for rainwater harvesting are obviously are toothless.
State governments can popularise rainwater harvesting by launching awareness drives, not just in urban areas but in rural areas as well. They can promote rainwater harvesting by incentivising housing societies that do comply, such as by offering a rebate on property tax for installing a rainwater harvesting system, severely penalise societies/builders who don't comply.
As some of the above examples show, local initiative can fill the gap even if policy and legislature fail at the city and state level. Individual housing societies take up the challenge of sustaining themselves through the annual water shortage. To do this, they must gauge the average rainfall in their particular area, evaluate how much water the society typically uses and to what extent it can depend on rainwater harvesting to meet those needs, and get their own rainwater harvesting systems in place.
Rooftop rainwater harvesting is among the most common solutions in rural areas as it is a basic, inexpensive method requiring minimum expertise for implementation. In this method, rainwater is collected on the roof and carried to a storage tank from where it goes to the point of consumption. This technique is ideal for supplementing existing water sources which may become brackish or polluted. Other methods of rainwater harvesting in rural areas include the gully plug and contour bund methods, as well as Gabion structures and percolation tanks.
It is said that World War III will not be fought for geographic dominance but solely on the basis of water. This may sound far-fetched to citizens of more developed countries. However, in India there are already daily battles being waged by areas, projects and individuals for access to this precious resource during summers. The conflict potential is indubitably high.
In such a scenario, state governments and local bodies must enforce rules on compulsory rainwater harvesting, and impose hefty penalties for non-compliance. This cannot happen too soon - it must happen now, or India will eventually lose its own Water Wars.
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