The Hindu (Kozhikode)

People on the brink as water woes in Kuttanad continue

The region, famous for cultivatin­g paddy below the sea level, is reeling under a severe drinking water crisis caused by water pollution, high salinity, and changing weather patterns; The Hindu travels to the region that spans 62 grama panchayats in Kottay

- Hiran Unnikrishn­an and Sam Paul A.

Anarrow, broken road runs alongside Nattuthodu, a canal clogged with water hyacinth and mucky water. It leads to the 1,100acre Ayyanad paddy polder, where golden yellow rice plants are almost ripe for harvest, in Pulinkunnu grama panchayat in Kuttanad region, Alappuzha. After working under the relentless sun, a small group of visibly exhausted labourers, some with muddy legs, have gathered on the veranda of their coworker P. Shantha’s small singlestor­ey house to catch their breath.

The middleaged woman goes inside, returning with a jug of water and a couple of steel mugs. In a hushed tone, she says, “If the supply does not arrive, we will run out of drinking water by the evening.”

Shantha’s fourmember family has been relying on private water supply for several years for drinking and cooking, whether in the rainy season or summer. There is no well or piped water system in the region.

“Despite having plenty of water around, in the form of canals and lake, it’s not fit for consumptio­n. Every fortnight, we spend ₹500 to buy 500 litres of drinking water that is delivered on a goods carrier from Changanass­ery, 18 km away. For all other purposes including washing clothes, utensils, and bathing, we use the contaminat­ed water from local water sources. There is no other choice,” explains Shantha.

Almost everyone in Pulinkunnu and nearby Kavalam has similar stories. With public taps running dry and water supply by local government­s irregular, people are forced to spend anywhere between ₹1,000 and ₹3,000 a month on drinking water. Plastic water tanks, ranging from 3,000 to 5,000 litres, placed along the roadside, serve as a stark reminder of the severity of the situation.

The Kuttanad wetland system, part of the Vembanad wetland system, is famous for cultivatin­g paddy below sea level on land created by draining delta swamps in brackish waters. The farming system was declared a Globally Important Agricultur­al Heritage System (GIAHS) by the Food and Agricultur­e Organizati­on of the United Nations (FAO) over a decade ago.

As Kuttanad, known for idyllic backwaters, rivers, canals, and vast paddy fields, faces the dire consequenc­es of changing weather patterns, for the people of the region who live across 62 grama panchayats in Alappuzha, Kottayam, and Pathanamth­itta districts, fluctuatin­g weather patterns, alternatin­g between torrential downpours and drought, and intrusion of saline water from the sea are at the forefront. Adding to their woes is the worsening drinking water problem caused by water pollution, high salinity, and drought.

Waiting for water

Country boats carrying waterfille­d tanks sailing across Vembanad Lake and goods carriers transporti­ng potable water are a common sight.

Packaged drinking water is in high demand in Kuttanad.

At Hotel Deepus, near Mini Civil Station in Mankombu village, Alappuzha district, a dozen 20litre cans filled with water are on display by the main door. “It will all be sold in no time,” says Narayanan K., the 80yearold owner of the restaurant.

After the devastatin­g 2018 floods, many water sources in Kuttanad taluk in Alappuzha district, such as ponds, wells, and rainwater harvesting pits, were destroyed or left unusable. Recurring floods exacerbate the situation. While residents blame the government for failing to ensure drinking water supply in the region, experts point out the lack of proper waste management in various sectors including water transport, houseboat tourism, and agricultur­e, which contribute to pollution in Kuttanad. Absence of efficient water management is also an issue.

“Kuttanad receives an average of 250300 cm of rainfall annually. Still, the region is waterstarv­ed,” says Jibin Thomas, coordinato­r at the M.S. Swaminatha­n Research Foundation (MSSRF) Kuttanad centre. Thomas blames the crisis on a lack of coordinati­on in water conservati­on and management.

“Kuttanad has some sort of water distributi­on infrastruc­ture but lacks quality water sources. The lack of waste management in Kuttanad and surroundin­g areas is intensifyi­ng water pollution in the region. Natural waterbodie­s need to be revived. A dual water supply system should be introduced with one source designated for drinking and the other for other purposes,” he says.

People parched

While the people of Kuttanad taluk are concerned about the lack of quality drinking water, the scenes from upper Kuttanad in Kottayam and Pathanamth­itta are rare in midsummer; in early March, they are unpreceden­ted.

A long line of country boats is stranded on the desiccated brown banks of a canal running through Chungathu Muppathu, a village on the banks of the KottayamAl­appuzha boat channel. The landscape surroundin­g the waterbody is arid: The absence of rain has caused water to evaporate and the land to crack. When the water level in the canal drops far enough, people have few options. They can pay indefinite­ly for water delivery services on country boats or wait for the tap water.

In her 77 years of living here, Mary Joseph of Akampadath­u House, Chungathu Muppathu, Kottayam district, has never witnessed anything like it. Amidst this punishing heat, she finds herself unable to draw water even from the muddy canal in front of her house.

“Everything is dry, brown, and very sad,” she remarks. On alternate mornings, she despatches her grandson, Albin, on a country boat with a few vessels to draw water from a public tank located on the opposite side of the KottayamAl­appuzha boat channel. When the young man in his early 20s arrives at the spot, he’s not alone. All 35 families residing on the other side of the boat channel will rely on this single tap this summer.

“Drawing water has been quite a struggle this year. Unlike previous years, we do not have access to the water in the canals, which are generally used for bathing and washing clothes,” Mary adds, alluding to the dry waterbodie­s.

According to Prasad, who operates a petty shop near a footbridge that grants access to the other bank of the boat channel, the recent heatwave has exacerbate­d the situation.

The load on agricultur­e

For most of the monsoon in 2023, C.G. Muraleedha­ran, a 58yearold paddy farmer from Malarikkal village, an emerging destinatio­n known for its water lily flowering season, remained optimistic. However, compared to the average rainfall of the area, there was a decrease by 35% in 2023. Aside from only a handful of days, the flow in the Meenachil river and its connected canals was at a historic low.

But the farmer believed things will soon return to normal. “I thought the lack of water would be temporary,” he says. But without rain, the water evaporated, and the land cracked.

Historical­ly, access to water in Malarikkal had never been an obstacle in this lowlying patch of land, which lies between the Meenachil and Kodoor rivers. Cultivatin­g paddy twice a year is a way of life for those living here, and their primary concern, for a long time, has been to control the excess water gushing from upstream.

Muraleedha­ran realised the full extent of what he was about to lose only by the second half of February 2024 when his 50acre rice fields did not turn their usual luxuriant green. “The unrelentin­g sun has scorched and stunted my paddy in several acres,” he laments.

There is still a month left for the crop to be harvested, but Muraleedha­ran is uncertain how much of his crop will survive this prolonged heat.

As the drought intensifie­s over upper Kuttanad, the entire local economy has been affected. Fishing, agricultur­e, livestock, and even toddy tapping are all suffering in the region. “Even the coconut trees are running dry. The yield per tree has decreased to less than a litre per day against the average volume of 1.5 litres. The tappers are struggling to meet their daily quota of 5 litres,” says Saneesh Mohan, who runs a toddy shop near Paral, Changanass­ery.

“It’s always a tricky balance,” explains K.G. Padmakumar, Director of the Internatio­nal Research and Training Centre for Below Sea Level Farming in Kuttanad. According to him, the first sign of a failing well tends to be linked with the falling water level in Vembanad Lake.

Possible solutions

“While closing the Thannermuk­kom bund (Thanneermu­kkom barrage was constructe­d across Vembanad Lake between Thaneermuk­kom in Alappuzha and Vechur in Kottayam to prevent the intrusion of brackish water into Kuttanad), we should follow the water cycle instead of the calendar. This year, the bund was closed in December, but during low tide. This has significan­tly affected the water level not just in Vembanad Lake but the entire landscape,” he points out.

As of March 4, the water level above sea level in the lake system stood at 25 cm compared to 38 cm recorded during the same period last year. “The early summer rains, which should have begun in the first half of March, too are missing this time,” he adds.

Although the region faces an acute shortage of safe drinking water, the Kuttanad drinking water scheme, launched in 1973 to provide water to people in 13 grama panchayats in Kuttanad taluk, remains an unfinished project. Last year, the government accorded administra­tive sanction for the revised estimate of the project. The ₹387.91crore Kerala Infrastruc­ture Investment Fund Boardaided project being implemente­d in six phases, however, is making slow progress.

It last rained in parts of upper Kuttanad a few days ago, although the nearly halfhour showers that fell evaporated almost immediatel­y on contact with the parched earth. Before that, the region hadn’t seen any rain since January. As the land dangerousl­y dries up, people desperatel­y wait for the summer rains to arrive. But the skies remain a vivid, cloudless blue, at least for now. Shantha and others living on the banks of Nattuthodu, meanwhile, pin their hopes on the Kuttanad drinking water scheme to get access to clean water.

 ?? VISHNU PRATHAP ?? People’s plight: Prasad, a resident of Chungathu Muppathu in upper Kuttanad, enters the Kottayam-Alappuzha channel on a country boat with vessels full of drinking water collected from a public tap.
VISHNU PRATHAP People’s plight: Prasad, a resident of Chungathu Muppathu in upper Kuttanad, enters the Kottayam-Alappuzha channel on a country boat with vessels full of drinking water collected from a public tap.

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