Millennium Post

26 Maharashtr­a dams hit zero water storage level as on May 18

- OUR CORRESPOND­ENT

MUMBAI: In a far cry from last year’s situation, 26 reservoirs in Maharashtr­a have reached “zero storage” as on May 18, according to statistics put out by the Water Conservati­on department of the state government.

The department’s website informed that water storage in Aurangabad Division, which comprises Aurangabad, Beed, Hingoli, Parbhani and Osmanabad districts, was 0.43 per cent as against 23.44 per cent at the same time last year.

The dams in these division are Paithan, Manjara, Majalgaon, Yeldari, Siddeshwar, Lower Terna, Sina Kolegaon and Lower Dhudna, all of which have zero storage at the moment, the department informed.

The storage in these dams in May last year was 34.95 per cent in Paithan, 21.24 per cent in Manjara, 17.5 per cent in Majalgaon and 52.03 per cent in Lower Terna.

Other dams that have hit the zero storage level as on May 18 are Kadakpurna and Pentakli in Buldhana, Gosikhurd, Dina and Nand in Nagpur Division, Upper Tapi Hathnur in Jalgaon, Waki, Bham, Bhavli and Punegaon in Nashik Division, Dibhe, Ghod, Pimpalgaon Joge, Wadaj and Temghar in Pune, Bhima, Kundali Tata and Lonavala Tata in Solapur, it informed.

Meanwhile, Tisgaon dam in Nashik and Totladoh in Nagpur have 0.01 and 0.08 per cent water respective­ly.

It said water storage in the state’s 103 large, medium and small reservoirs stood at 11.84 per cent, against 23.73 per cent last year.

Sanjay Lakhe Patil, a social activist, alleged that the state government’s distributi­on of fodder camps for cattle in the drought-affected regions was not proper.

Terming it an “animal farm” situation where only the fittest survive, Patil said, “Only the strong political leaders got cattle camps, fodder, water in their districts in large numbers, whereas drought relief should have been distribute­d equitably.”

He added that drawing dead water stock would impact the safety of the dams. Dead water storage refers to the water in a reservoir that cannot be drained using the dams outlets and can only be pumped out.

“There is no surface and ground water in most parts of the state. The water quality supplied through tankers is of very poor quality. This is affecting the health of children and pregnant women in the rural areas. The government was in election mode and ignored droughtrel­ief measures. It is monitoring such work from AC offices,” he alleged.

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