Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Govt to revive drying springs in ten states of Himalayan region

- Toufiq Rashid toufiq.rashid@hindustant­imes.com

Thousands of dried up springs across the Himalayan region will be revived as part of the government’s programme aimed at recharging groundwate­r and ensuring safe drinking water in villages where these bodies are the primary source of clean water.

The Union ministry of water resources and Central Ground Water Board are planning to hold a national workshop involving 12 states in the Indian Himalayan region to discuss issues related to the sustainabl­e developmen­t of springs and strategies for their renovation, rejuvenati­on and augmentati­on, officials said.

A spring is a point from where water flows out of aquifers or the body of permeable rock which contain groundwate­r and transmit it to the earth’s surface.

The workshop will be followed by a study in selected areas to generate data. “The study will monitor spring discharge and spring water quality,’’ the water board’s chairperso­n KN Naik said.

The government has already started a pilot study in Uttarakhan­d’s Dehradun. Naik said the board signed a pact with the Geological Survey of India’s state unit office in Dehradun for the study on the sustainabi­lity of springs in parts of the state’s Almora district in December 2017. “For two years, the study would focus on the preparatio­n of spring developmen­t and rejuvenati­on plans through investigat­ions on the characteri­sation of the springs. It will also study how to the factors controllin­g recharge and discharge of the springs as well as its water quality,’’ he said.

The revival programme will be gradually extended to the entire Himalayan region to include the ten hill states of Jammu and Kashmir (J&K), Himachal Pradesh, Uttarakhan­d, Sikkim, Arunachal Pradesh, Manipur, Meghalaya, Mizoram, Nagaland. And, two partial hill states of Assam and West Bengal will also come under its ambit.

The National Institutio­n for Transformi­ng India, also called NITI Aayog, constitute­d a working group in June last year on the “Inventory and Revival of Springs of Himalaya for Water Security”. The group was set up to take a stock of the magnitude of the problem of drying springs, quality of their water and review the related policies.

The report by the group in December 2017 says there are five million springs across India of which, nearly three million are in the Himalayan region, which is home to nearly 50 million people.

“Mountain springs are the primary source of water for the rural households in the Himalayan region. For many people, springs are the sole source of water. For example, a major proportion of drinking water supply in the mountainou­s parts of Uttarakhan­d is spring based, while in Meghalaya all villages in the state use springs for drinking and/or irrigation,’’ the report says.

The government of Sikkim has already presented a successful example as it has taken up the revival under its water security scheme. Recharging of the springs was started in 2012 in the northeaste­rn states.

The villages situated on the top of the hills from where rainwater was draining off through steep slope were chosen. Groundwate­r was recharged by digging new dug ponds, tanks and trenches that stored rainwater. Saplings were planted along the trenches to stop soil erosion. The recharged groundwate­r, said experts, helped revive the springs. They added revival will primarily depend on the health of the catchment area of the springs.

“Life in the mountains depend on springs. They are not just part of the heritage but the health of the rivers also depends on the health of the springs,’’ Himanshu Thakkar of South Asia Network on Rivers, Dams and People (SANDRP) said. “It requires seriousnes­s on the part of the government. As the springs are directly related to the health of catchment areas, forestatio­n,’’ he added.

NEWDELHI:

 ?? SHUTTERSTO­CK ?? A spring is a point from where water flows out of aquifers or the body of permeable rock which contain groundwate­r and transmit it to the earth’s surface.
SHUTTERSTO­CK A spring is a point from where water flows out of aquifers or the body of permeable rock which contain groundwate­r and transmit it to the earth’s surface.

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