Down to Earth

Ravines spreading in central Gujarat

Soil erosion has triggered expansion of ravines in four districts of Gujarat, threatenin­g agricultur­e and livelihood

- SHAGUN KAPIL KHEDA, GUJARAT

THE RAVINES have always been there, lining the riverbank, but after the floods in 1973 they started expanding towards the village,” says 73-year-old Chaggan Bhoi of Sarnal village in Gujarat’s Kheda district. The village is barely a kilometre from the Mahi river in central Gujarat. “That year, it rained for 24 straight days and the water from the river entered the village, forming a maze of streams. Since then, massive soil erosion has happened, mostly on the periphery of the village. Residents fear that if left unchecked, the ravines would swallow the village and they might have to migrate,” Bhoi adds.

ALMOST ALL OF INDIA’S RAVINES ARE IN THE VICINITY OF THE VINDHYAS, WITH OVER 60 PER CENT IN UTTAR PRADESH, GUJARAT MADHYA PRADESH AND RAJASTHAN

Kheda is one of Gujarat’s four districts—Panchmahal, Vadodara and Anand being the others—severly affected by expanding ravines (see ‘Unchecked spread’). This monsoon season, the region saw heavy rainfall due to which new ravines have been formed in Khadol, Gadia and Rania villages of Kheda and Nani Sherdi of Anand. In last four to five decades, ravines have increased by 60-70 per cent in the four districts, estimates Satish Macwan of Foundation for Ecological Security (FES), an Anand-based non-profit working to check soil erosion. “Nearly 30,000 hectares (ha) is currently affected by extreme land degradatio­n and ‘ravination’ and the rate is increasing. A decade ago, the figure was 20,000 ha. Every year, there is a loss of about 0.58 million tonnes of soil due to erosion,” Macwan adds.

Ravines in India are a geological feature formed millions of years ago when the peninsular plate pressed against the Himalayas. Almost all of India’s ravines are found in the vicinity of the Vindhyas, with over 60 per cent being in Uttar Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh, Gujarat and Rajasthan, as per the National Remote Sensing Centre, Hyderabad. However, ravines get aggravated by soil erosion, mostly caused by a flowing waterbody. The adjacent land gets eroded to form narrow depression­s with sharp slopes. Over time, ravines widen, rendering land uncultivab­le and infertile with the erosion of the topsoil.

Parts of these four districts form the second largest ravines in India after the Chambal region of Madhya Pradesh. “Undulating topography and loose soil structure, along with increasing loss of vegetative cover, has led us here,” says Chetan Jha, team leader, FES. “The destructio­n started after Independen­ce, when people encroached upon forestland and felled trees to farm. Earlier, districts like Kheda had huge forest cover. Now when rain falls, the arable topsoil gets washed away,” says Macwan.

“I have lost 0.3 ha of my 2 ha farmland to ravines in the past five years,” says Nageen, 62, of Sarnal. “I talked to government officials, who visit our village, about any scheme under which I could get some monetary assistance for ravine reclamatio­n. I was willing to bear 50 per cent of the cost but did not get any help,” he recollects.

The reason Nageen could not avail help from a government scheme for ravine reclamatio­n is that Gujarat does not have one. With the rest of his farmland also partially eroded, Nageen has given up full time farming and only grows fodder crops for his animals.

“There is a need for a countrylev­el ravine reclamatio­n programme,” says S K Singh, director, National Bureau of Soil Survey and Land Use Planning, Nagpur. ‘There is a programme for management of river courses but it doesn’t cover ravines,” he adds. “The government has money but no planning,” says Dinkar Panchal, field coordinato­r, Kheda, FES. “Madhya Pradesh has a dedicated programme for ravine reclamatio­n but in Gujarat most work is done under other government programmes, such as the Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Act (MGNREGA),” he complains.

This approach has its own limitation­s. MGNREGA is mostly related to constructi­on of roads or infrastruc­ture building and ravine reclamatio­n is not a priority. “The magnitude of erosion is so huge that it requires a lot of investment. Even short-term land levelling is cost-intensive. Reclaiming land under MGNREGA is just not enough,” says Macwan. “At the village level, people or small groups should be given long-term tenure rights over the village commons land they reclaim. Then they would feel a sense of ownership,” he argues.

FES has been working in the region since 1987 and is currently undertakin­g initiative­s in about 60 ravine-affected villages in the four districts. Along with the help of community members, the organisati­on primarily focuses on using low cost soil and water conservati­on

measures to check ravines. The two things that it has done extensivel­y are building check dams in affected areas and large-scale bamboo plantation. Small earthen check dams in gullies prevent the ravines from spreading, and as the silt keeps depositing, the degraded land gets

levelled. On the other hand, plantation of the fast-growing bamboo helps in arresting the run-off (see ‘Green those ravines’). “Indian Council of Agricultur­al Research is already talking about bamboo plantation in ravine-affected areas. It has identified some spots and the

suitable species. The plan, however, is yet to be executed,” says Singh. “We also need a comprehens­ive study of country’s ravines. We cannot manage them unless we understand their formation and the local variables,” he adds.

 ??  ?? Ravines such as these have started appearing in Sarnal village of Gujarat’s Kheda district
Ravines such as these have started appearing in Sarnal village of Gujarat’s Kheda district
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