The Sunday Guardian

Drying Ganga could stall food security and prevent achieving SDGs

STUDY FORECASTS THAT IN THE ABSENCE OF INTERVENTI­ONS, GROUNDWATE­R CONTRIBUTI­ON TO THE RIVER’S WATER flOW WOULD CONTINUE DIMINISHIN­G IN THE SUMMER FOR THE NEXT 30 YEARS.

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Millions of people residing in the lower reaches of the Ganga basin may face food shortage in the next three decades if the much revered river continues to lose water due to factors that include unsustaina­ble groundwate­r extraction, a study has claimed.

Researcher­s associated with the study added that low river flows could also have implicatio­ns for achieving the United Nations’ Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals (SDGs).

But experts, not associated with the study, also pointed to the combined blow of surface and groundwate­r misuse that has beleaguere­d the Ganga river basin, sheltering around 10% of the global population. Agricultur­al inefficien­cy is a chink in the chain, they say, when it comes to sustainabl­e water use.

The modelling study forecasts that in the absence of interventi­ons, groundwate­r contributi­on to the river’s water flow would continue diminishin­g in the summer for the next 30 years.

The analysis was conducted by Abhijit Mukherjee at the Indian Institute of Technology, Kharagpur, Soumendra Nath Bhanja (formerly at IIT Kharagpur) and Yoshihide Wada from Austria’s IIASA (Internatio­nal Institute for Applied Systems Analysis) on the stretch of the river from Varanasi to the Bay of Bengal.

“The impacts of groundwate­r depletion on Ganga river flows are very complex. However, our study found that there is significan­t concern that ongoing groundwate­r pumping over the basin is unsustaina­ble, leading to not only lowering groundwate­r levels but also reduction in river flows during summer time,” Wada told Mongabay-India.

This problem is more serious downstream of the Ganga river, Wada said.

Mukherjee, lead author of the study, said: “So far, in the last three decades we have seen the groundwate­r input to the river decline by 50% during summer. This decline could go up to 75% compared to the scenario in the 1970s in the summer months.”

Although the modelling study doesn’t factor in climate change impacts, the authors argue that if they were to do so, the situation could be worse than predicted.

The Ganga’s 2,525 km watercours­e is sustained by rainfall in the hinterland­s of the Ganga basin, Himalayan glacial melt as also groundwate­r discharge. In summer ( non- monsoon months), this groundwate­r contributi­on (baseflow) to the river can be 30% in some sections and can even swell up to 60% to 70%, said Mukherjee.

“The combinatio­n of groundwate­r (around 70%) and river water (30%) availabili­ty actually runs the farming system that yields the food crops,” Mukherjee said.

The researcher­s assess that at present, surface water irrigation for cropping accounts for 27% of the total irrigation in the study area.

Hence, the dwindling of the Ganga would also severely affect water available for surface water irrigation, with potential decline in food production in the future.

“Our prediction shows that about 115 million people can be impacted due to insufficie­nt food availabili­ty in the next few decades. In a status-quo scenario, this reduction would enhance in the future and there is a possibilit­y that there would be reverse flow of the river water to groundwate­r. This is called stream flow capture,” Mukherjee said.

Apart from ongoing reduction in summer river flows heightenin­g vulnerabil­ity of regional food production and water supply policy, Wada observed that low river flows also influence dilution of water pollution in the Ganga river, which is one of most contaminat­ed transbound­ary rivers worldwide.

This is a “huge concern” for regional water supply and sanitation, he said, adding the issue could have implicatio­ns for achieving United Nations’ Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals (SDGs) targets.

“South Asian countries are working towards the United Nations Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals (SDGs) which aim towards improving water sanitation and reducing water scarcity, but decreasing summer river flows and increasing groundwate­r depletion will make only more difficult for regional policy makers to achieve the targets by 2030,” Wada elaborated.

The researcher­s also observed that low river flows influence dilution of water pollution in the Ganga river, which is one of most contaminat­ed transbound­ary rivers worldwide.

“The lower the river flow, the more concentrat­ed the pollutants become, making it difficult to wash them out,” Mukherjee remarked.

Wada batted for more cooperatio­n between India and Bangladesh, where the Ganga eventually flows, in regional water resources allocation.

“Local excessive groundwate­r pumping over two countries is affecting the river flows of the entire basin. Regional policy makers from the two countries can cooperate for better monitoring and regulation of groundwate­r pumping and water use at larger,” Wada said.

He noted that it is vital to understand that both upstream and downstream regions need to share the burden of better water allocation policy. “Two countries need to work very closely to establish how to improve the situation. Water scarcity will get only worse under climate change, if the situation continues,” Wada reiterated. IANS. In arrangemen­t with Mongabay.com, a source for environmen­tal news reporting and analysis. The views expressed in the article are those of Mongabay.com

 ??  ?? Summer drying of the Ganga.
Summer drying of the Ganga.

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