China Daily (Hong Kong)

Are we waiting for the well to run dry?

- Contact the writer at oprana@chinadaily.com.cn

Embraced by the snowy arms of the Himalayas, Shimla sits at an average altitude of 2,200 meters. Developed by the British colonial rulers as the summer capital of India in the 19th century, Shimla boasts a UNESCO World Heritage Site — as part of the Mountain Himalayan Railways of India — and beautiful colonial architectu­re.

And for generation­s it has served as a hill station retreat for tens of thousands of Indian and foreign tourists every year, who are drawn to its subtropica­l highland climate and the snow-capped peaks surroundin­g it. In other words, tourism is the lifeblood of the city’s economy.

But now Shimla’s residents are begging tourists (through social media platforms) to stay away, and that too at the beginning of the peak tourist season. Why? Because of an acute water shortage.

Shimla is the capital of the India’s northern province of Himachal Pradesh, and claims to be the “Queen of the Hills” of India, although there are other claimants such as Darjeeling (famous for its tea) in West Bengal and Ooty in Tamil Nadu. But Shimla’s almost 200,000 residents have been forced to stand with plastic buckets in long water lines on Mall Road — famous for its shops and restaurant­s which are normally crowded with visitors at this time of the year.

Worse, scientists at the Center for Science and Environmen­t in New Delhi say that after South Africa’s Cape Town, which faces a possible “Day Zero” for the end of its tap water supply next year, India’s tech hub of Bangalore in the southern province of Karnataka could be among the next big cities most at risk, because the filling up of its lakes and other developmen­t activities have drasticall­y decreased the sources of water.

This is a warning for India. If the government doesn’t take immediate corrective measures, Shimla-like crises could be seen across India.

But this is a lesson for other countries, too, China in particular. According to a 2014 report, more than 59 percent of China’s groundwate­r sites were poor or extremely poor. An earlier Ministry of Housing and Urban-Rural Developmen­t said because of overexploi­tation of groundwate­r more than 60,000 square kilometers of ground surface have sunk, threatenin­g more than 50 cities with land subsidence.

In fact, the decision to relocate Beijing’s noncapital functions to Xiongan New Area in Hebei province, which is home to Baiyangdia­n Lake, the largest freshwater body in North China, has a lot to do with the water shortage Beijing faces.

China has about 20 percent of the world’s population but less than 6 percent of its groundwate­r. The overstress­ed aquifer in North China serves 11 percent of the country’s population, 13 percent of its agricultur­al needs and 70 percent of its coal production.

Which means, if business as usual continues unabated, North China, which includes Beijing, could face an unimaginab­le water crisis in the near future.

Indeed, the government has taken some remedial measures, but more are needed to ensure water security.

 ??  ?? OP Rana Second Thoughts
OP Rana Second Thoughts

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