The Free Press Journal

Groundwate­r level depletes in state

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The groundwate­r level in 60 per cent tehsils of Maharashtr­a has depleted by a minimum of one metre, a Maharashtr­a government agency report said.

The dip in the groundwate­r level would trigger a water crisis in these tehsils during the summer season, it said.

“Of the 353 tehsils in Maharashtr­a, 218 have shown groundwate­r level depleting by at least one metre. A total of 5,166 villages in these tehsils would face water scarcity during the summer season,” a report released by the Groundwate­r Surveys and Developmen­t Agency (GSDA) said. The report is based on the readings taken at 3,920 observatio­n wells across the state.

The agency monitors groundwate­r levels and the readings taken in the month of March are crucial since it helps in framing policies to tackle scarcity situation with necessary planning.

A total of 2,130 villages in 72 tehsils, where there was a rainfall deficit in a range of 0-20 per cent in 2016, have shown groundwate­r depletion of more than one metre, said the report.

Similarly, 1,854 villages in 113 tehsils which received excess rainfall during the monsoon have reported a minimum one metre depletion in groundwate­r levels, it said.

The report further mentioned that there are 325 villages in Maharashtr­a where the groundwate­r level has depleted more than three metres, which is considered as a worst situation.

Former associate professor (irrigation management) at Water and Land Management Institute (WALMI), Aurangabad, Pradeep Purandare, while attributin­g reasons for the dip in groundwate­r level, said, “The two possibilit­ies are of farmers opting for water intensive crops and exploitati­on of resources by private companies supplying drinking water.”

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