Khaleej Times

Every drop counts: No more water salute

Sugar crop, distilleri­es blamed for aggravatio­n of crisis in Latur region

- Nithin Belle — nithin@khaleejtim­es.com

mumbai — With Maharashtr­a reeling under the impact of a severe drought, officials at the internatio­nal airport here have decided to do away with the traditiona­l ‘water cannon salute’ to receive Etihad’s A-380 aircraft on Sunday.

The Abu Dhabi-based airline will be introducin­g its A-380 service to Mumbai from Sunday. It will be the third airline — after Singapore Airlines and Emirates — to operate A380s to Mumbai.

Airports and ports around the world have traditiona­lly welcomed new aircraft and vessels by showering water through fire brigades or water jets when they land or arrive.

latur — Haribhau Kamble, an unemployed labourer in India’s richest state of Maharashtr­a, is forced to queue for hours in scorching heat to fetch water even as the government puts on trains to ship water to the region parched by backto-back drought years.

Like Kamble, millions of Indians have been hung out to dry in the state with the worst drought in four decades ravaging crops, killing livestock, emptying reservoirs and slowing hydroelect­ric power output. Mismanagem­ent of water resources, with powerful politician­s pushing for bigger supplies to industries, have made the situation worse, experts say.

“The government says it is bringing water by train every day, but we are getting water once a week,” Kamble said, after standing in line for three hours to fill two pitchers at a tap in Latur district, 500 km (300 miles) southeast of Mumbai in drought-stricken Marathwada region.

Locals had been hoping a 50-wagon daily water train would ease shortages, but they were disappoint­ed as the 2.5 million litres carried by the train and ferried by tankers to villages was not enough to meet the needs of Latur’s half a million people and Marathwada’s 19 million.

Marathwada, home to many sugar mills in Maharashtr­a — the nation’s top producer, is one of the several regions in India that received below-average June-September rains in 2015. New Delhi estimates that overall 330 million people — a quarter of the country’s population — are currently affected by drought.

Water is set to get scarcer over the next two months as temperatur­es soar above 40 degrees Celsius, drying up Marathwada reservoirs that are now just 3 per cent full.

“That Maharashtr­a would face a water crisis was clear when monsoons failed, yet the state took no action to curb supplies to water-guzzling industries like beer and sugar,” said Parineeta Dandekar, associate coordinato­r at the South Asia Network on Dams, Rivers and People. “There are limits on how much water the government can supply by train. Had it reserved water sources for drinking last year, the situation would have been much better now.”

A rapid expansion of sugar cultivatio­n has made matters worse. Cane accounts for 4 per cent of Maharashtr­a’s crop area but devours two-thirds of its irrigation water.

Also, given politician­s have stakes in sugar mills and other industries, there is a growing concern

The government says it is bringing water by train every day, but we are getting water once a week.

Haribhau Kamble, an unemployed labourer

they may try to ensure water supply for their ventures.

Pankaja Munde, a state minister from Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) and whose husband is a director of a distillery in Aurangabad, Marathwada, has said the liquor industry should get all the water allocated to it.

Munde did not respond to text messages seeking comment.

The Aurangabad bench of Bombay High Court, however, on Tuesday asked Maharashtr­a to halve water supply to liquor firms immediatel­y and cut supply by another 10 per cent from May 10.

Eknath Khadse, Maharashtr­a’s agricultur­e minister, said the state was also planning to restrict cane cultivatio­n and propose a five-year ban on new mills in Marathwada to conserve water.

At the centre, Modi’s government is focusing on managing watersheds and linking rivers to move water to dry regions to combat the crisis in India, which has 17 per cent of the world’s population but only 4 per cent of fresh rain water resources.

But the need of the hour is smaller, cost-effective steps such as enforcing restrictio­ns on water use and ensuring canals do not leak.

“Canals are leaking everywhere in Maharashtr­a. Only a third of water released from dams reaches farms,” said Pradeep Purandare, a water and irrigation specialist from Aurangabad. “There is complete mismanagem­ent of water resources.” —

 ?? PTI ?? A farmer walk with a calf on parched lake bed at drought-hit Hukunda near Chikmagalu­r in Karnataka on Thursday. —
PTI A farmer walk with a calf on parched lake bed at drought-hit Hukunda near Chikmagalu­r in Karnataka on Thursday. —
 ?? Reuters ?? A worker stands in front of a tanker wagon carrying water at a railway station in Latur. —
Reuters A worker stands in front of a tanker wagon carrying water at a railway station in Latur. —

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