Down to Earth

We need to tweak traditiona­l methods to tackle climate change

- BY BIKSHAM GUJJA @down2earth­india

TRADITIONA­L WATER management systems, such as tanks, wells and ponds, had inbuilt sustainabi­lity and stood the test of time. Sound on knowledge, these were designed for multi-functions but could not meet the growing human needs. Their inbuilt sustainabi­lity needs to be brought back through different designs and interventi­ons. This is a challenge.

Growing water needs of humans led to rapid extraction of surface and ground water. This put pressure on the traditiona­l systems and they started disappeari­ng. Where once wells, tanks and ponds stood, we now have apartments. Fragmentat­ion of land, increase in land prices and urban expansion swallowed public and private spaces. Not that everything has been lost. But whatever has remained has been altered and is no longer traditiona­l or serves the purpose for which it was built.

The realisatio­n that these systems need to be revived led to many projects. Government­s allocated a lot of money to protect whatever remained. There are many support groups and lobbies to protect, revive and even expand these systems. The results, however, have been mixed and it is difficult to say how much have the programmes contribute­d to solve the water crisis. Moreover, it is beyond the scope of traditiona­l water management systems to solve the problems posed by climate change, which are of a different scale. Wherever they still exist, however, the systems can help communitie­s adapt to the impact of climate change at local levels.

Thanks to the efforts of civil society organisati­ons in the past two-three decades, there is awareness for protecting, restoring and revitalisi­ng traditiona­l waterbodie­s across the country. In rural India, while the net area and role of traditiona­l systems in meeting water needs has declined, there are many projects to restore them. Urban spaces too are increasing­ly creating provisions for water storage systems including treatment plants. There is an interest to protect the water structures that have survived in the neighbourh­ood. Households now want to build structures to store rainwater with or without government support. There are several products in the markets to help households save, treat and reuse water. These initiative­s will contribute to reducing water demand and government­s are incorporat­ing them in the standard guidelines for high-end building projects. To what extent these will address the problems of climate change is difficult to say, but they surely reflect people’s awareness about the need of local water storage in addressing the global problem. The underlying concept of re-using and storing water built in the traditiona­l systems can be a great help in designing interventi­ons to deal with much bigger challenge of climate change and its impact on our water resources.

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