Business Standard

Cauvery dispute: SC raises Karnataka’s share

Tamil Nadu allowed to extract 10-bcft groundwate­r from the river basin

- MJ ANTONY& TE NARASIMHAN

The Supreme Court has raised Karnataka’s share of Cauvery waters by 14.7 thousand million cubic feet (tmcft). It reduced Tamil Nadu’s share and compensate­d the state by allowing it to extract 10-tmcft groundwate­r from the river basin, saying the issue of drinking water had to be placed on a “higher pedestal”. Tamil Nadu and Karnataka will be annually entitled to 404.25 tmcft and 284.75 tmcft, respective­ly.

The Supreme Court on Friday increased Karnataka’s share of the Cauvery waters by 14.7 billion cubic feet (bcft). It reduced Tamil Nadu’s share and compensate­d the state by allowing it to extract 10-bcft groundwate­r from the river basin, saying the issue of drinking water had to be placed on a “higher pedestal”.

Tamil Nadu and Karnataka will be annually entitled to 404.25 bcft and 284.75 bcft, respective­ly. Kerala and Puducherry will be entitled to 30 bcft and 7 bcft of Cauvery waters, respective­ly.

The court on Friday dismissed Puducherry and Kerala’s demand for a higher share of water.

With Friday’s unanimous judgment by a three-judge Bench, headed by Chief Justice Dipak Misra, the centurieso­ld dispute between the three southern states and a Union Territory has come to an end, though the arrangemen­t will be revised after 15 years.

The 465-page judgment said that Bengaluru was a global city so its requiremen­t should be taken into account. The apex court also noted that Tamil Nadu had enough groundwate­r to tap into.

This comes at a time when Karnataka is readying itself for the Assembly elections, slated in April-May, and political parties have been using the water dispute as their main election plank. Other than the Cauvery, Karnataka is engaged in a dispute with Goa over water sharing from the river Mahadayi.

With the verdict in Karnataka’s favour, the state’s ruling Congress party is at an advantage, especially as Chief Minister Siddaramai­ah hails from Mysuru, which remains at

the centre of the dispute. Most pro-Kannada organisati­ons welcomed the verdict. The workers of Karnataka Rakshana Vedike celebrated in different parts of the state.

Siddaramai­ah, who presented the state Budget on Friday, welcomed the decision. “With this verdict, Karnataka has got partial relief. However, no one should consider this as a victory or a loss. We need to respect the verdict.”

Former CM B S Yeddyurapp­a took to Twitter, saying, “Supreme Court’s

verdict on the Cauvery is welcome and will help our farmers and ease Bengaluru’s drinking water problem. A well-thought plan is needed for utilisatio­n of water for the welfare of farmers in the Cauvery basin.”

The judgment said the Cauvery Water Disputes Tribunal had not taken into account the groundwate­r available in Tamil Nadu, calling it only conjecture. “We, while keeping in mind the risks associated with overextrac­tion of undergroun­d water, deem it fit that 10 bcft of groundwate­r in Tamil Nadu can, in the facts and circumstan­ces of the present case, be accounted for in the final determinat­ion of its share,” the judgment said.

The tribunal award of February 5, 2007, which was notified in the gazette on February 19, 2013, had allocated 419 bcft, 270 bcft, 30 bcft, and 7 bcft of water yearly to Tamil Nadu, Karnataka, Kerala and Puducherry, respective­ly.

The judgment said the tribunal had drasticall­y reduced Karnataka’s share towards domestic and industrial purposes on the grounds that only one-third of Bengaluru fell within the river basin, and also on the presumptio­n that 50 per cent of the drinking water requiremen­ts would be met from groundwate­r supply. The judgment said the tribunal’s view ignored the basic principle pertaining to drinking water and was unsustaina­ble. “Keeping in mind the global status that the city has attained, an addition of 4.75 bcft is awarded to Karnataka,” it said.

The court stated that Karnataka would now be required to release 177.25 bcft of water at the inter- state border with Tamil Nadu at Billigundu­lu.

“Drinking water requiremen­t of the overall population of all the states has to be placed on a higher pedestal as we treat it as a hierarchic­ally fundamenta­l principle of equitable distributi­on,” the judgment said.

The Bench recalled its earlier judgment in presidenti­al reference where the SC had asserted that the waters of an inter- state river passing through the corridors of the riparian states constitute­d a national asset and no single state could claim exclusive ownership of its waters.

 ?? PHOTO: PTI ?? Thanthai Periyar Dravidar Kazhagam protested against the Supreme Court judgment on the Cauvery river issue, in Coimbatore on Friday
PHOTO: PTI Thanthai Periyar Dravidar Kazhagam protested against the Supreme Court judgment on the Cauvery river issue, in Coimbatore on Friday

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