Millennium Post

Perennial to seasonal

Majority of river basins in India are going through difficult times — declining flows, increased pollution loads and rampant habitat degradatio­n

- VENKATESH DUTTA

Our excessive interferen­ce with freshwater ecosystem has impacted every river’s natural landscape, its form and flow patterns over the past three decades. The perennial rivers are becoming seasonal rivers with fragmented and intermitte­nt flows. This is a disturbing trend, especially for plainfed rivers of India such as Gomti, Ramganga, Chambal, Ken, Betwa and many more in the list whose only source of flow is rainfall and baseflow from groundwate­r. These rivers do not get any water from the Himalayan snowmelt and originate from hills, forests or lakes.

At the time of India’s Independen­ce, the per capita water availabili­ty was around 5,200 cubic metres (cum), which has now dropped to 1,500 cum. With the rapid growth in population, urbanisati­on and industrial­isation, rivers have been increasing­ly controlled by dams, diverted and over-allocated for agricultur­al, domestic and industrial purposes. In doing so, we resorted to various ‘quick-fix’ solutions such as excessive groundwate­r abstractio­n, led by the pump-revolution starting late 1970s that

led to the drying of many rivers during

lean seasons.

A river must have sufficient flow to match downstream allocation­s to meet societal needs as well as to maintain its aquatic life forms. Rivers in the urban stretch are expected to carry most of the brunt costs for infrastruc­ture and metropolit­an growth and developmen­t. Floodplain­s and river corridors are struggling with a spatial mismatch with real estate projects siphoning the life out of historic ghats and ecological­ly rich river banks while turning the river terrace into a built landscape. Though urban rivers are still termed as ‘rivers of life’, they have been victims of built legacy, often treated without ecological and cultural enrichment.

River corridors and active floodplain­s are rapidly transformi­ng into agricultur­al lands and urban settlement­s. It is a bitter fact that along with Ganga, the flow in most of its tributarie­s has dropped. The flow in the Ramganga river has alone dropped by 65 per cent between 2000 to 2018 at major stretches.

Similarly, the Gomti shows a declining trend due to over-exploitati­on of groundwate­r in its catchments. Its flow has declined by almost 52 per cent between 1978 to 2016. The Krishna is the fourth-biggest river of India in terms of water inflows and river basin area, but its flow is getting thinner with each passing year. Its delta will turn into a desert due to over-allocation from several major and medium irrigation projects. The situation is so awful that borewells and open wells too have started drying in many villages of Belagavi district.

Similarly, Cauvery river is under severe stress and dried up at several places the last many summers. From its origin in Talakaveri, the 765-km

long river flows through Hassan, Mandya and Mysuru districts in Karnataka before entering Tamil Nadu — the lower riparian state where many of its tributarie­s face a slow demise.

The Godavari, earlier a perennial water source for Telangana, now struggles for survival. Locals say this is the worst they have seen the river look in the last 45 years.

Most of the major river basins in India are going through difficult times — declining flows, increased pollution

loads and rampant habitat degradatio­n. But the policy response from both the Centre and states have been poor. Various schemes and policy strategies hardly evoked any major restoratio­n plan on the ground. Even India’s water policy fails miserably to formulate a solid plan to restore many of its degraded river systems.

The focus has mainly been on building dams and canals using limited river water. The management of rivers by default has gone to the irrigation department whose engineers do not talk about restoratio­n of flows and conservati­on of river ecosystems. They do not understand the difference in the valuation of water infrastruc­ture and having water in the river with healthy ecosystem functions. Maintenanc­e of water infrastruc­ture is given topmost priority while ignoring the very source of natural water resources, the catchments and many natural channels that feed them.

The major rivers of India depend upon many of their smaller tributarie­s and natural channels. No one is talking to restore these smaller rivers. Our largest share of freshwater, almost 85 per cent, goes to irrigate our farms.

With the developmen­t in drilling and pump-technology, we are going deeper and deeper into the aquifers leading to massive groundwate­r abstractio­n. This has resulted in the lowering of the water table to levels below that of the river and forcing the river to feed the groundwate­r instead. This has robbed water from our plain-fed rivers as they depend largely upon groundwate­r during summer. India’s once-perennial rivers are dying, and we need to work on their restoratio­n plan and all aspects which affect river flows through robust institutio­ns and governance at the river basin level.

(The author is a river scientist and associate professor at the School for Environmen­tal Sciences, Ambedkar University, Lucknow. He is also a Gomti River Waterkeepe­r. The views

expressed are strictly personal)

Policy response from both the Centre and states have been poor. Various schemes and policy strategies hardly evoked any major restoratio­n plan on the ground. Even India’s water policy fails miserably to formulate a solid plan to restore many of its degraded river systems

 ??  ?? Gomti’s flow has declined by almost 52 per cent between 1978 to 2016 due to over-exploitati­on of groundwate­r in its catchments
Gomti’s flow has declined by almost 52 per cent between 1978 to 2016 due to over-exploitati­on of groundwate­r in its catchments
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