The Hindu (Bangalore)

Bengaluru East taluk worst affected in depletion of groundwate­r levels

‘There is no Cauvery river water supply and since it houses the IT corridor, there is unregulate­d developmen­t and therefore the number of illegal borewells is also probably the highest here’

- K.V. Aditya Bharadwaj

Bengaluru East taluk seems to be the worst affected by the depleting groundwate­r levels in the city this summer, even as Bengaluru North taluk is the least affected, data from the Karnataka Groundwate­r Authority shows.

The data of groundwate­r levels for last December and this January and February shows that Bengaluru East taluk, which houses one of the major IT corridors of the city, where the water crisis is most severe and groundwate­r exploitati­on unbridled, has seen the most dip in groundwate­r levels this summer.

Compared to the decadal average (20142023) groundwate­r levels for these months, Bengaluru East taluk has recorded a dip of 10.8 metres in groundwate­r levels this February, 9.28 metres in January and 5.81 metres last December. The taluk has also recorded a dip of 5.52 metres during the December February period in absolute terms.

“There is no Cauvery river water supply to most areas of the East taluk and since it houses the IT corridor, there is unregulate­d developmen­t and therefore the number of illegal borewells in this taluk is also probably the highest here. There is unbridled vertical growth and there is a big lag in resource allocation to this population. So groundwate­r levels depleting the most in East taluk is sort of expected,” said Jagadish Reddy, a resident of Varthur.

Meanwhile, while compared to the decadal average groundwate­r levels, Bengaluru South taluk may not be one of the worst affected: it saw a dip of 6.15 metres in February compared to the decadal average for the month, 1.38 metres in January, and only 0.74 metres in December.

The taluk saw the biggest dip of 7.88 metres during the December February period.

Meanwhile, Bengaluru North taluk seems to be the least affected in terms of depleting groundwate­r levels. Compared to the decadal averages, North taluk saw groundwate­r levels dip by 0.02 metres in December, 2.62 metres in January, and 0.35 metres in February.

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