A social entrepreneur and innovator based in Ahmedabad, Gujarat, Biplab
Ketan Paul, has devised an innovative and path-breaking
water-harvesting community initiative led by women. He has facilitated
more than 14,000 farmers and transformed 40,000 acres of barren,
disaster-affected or highly saline land into productive farms.
“Water is powerful, you cannot control water,” says Biplab, 46, who has
successfully harnessed the precious natural commodity through an
innovative process named ‘Bhungroo,’ which uses pipes to filter and
store rain water in underground reservoirs with capacities to hold as
much as 40 million litres of water in it.
Image & Article courtesy : theweekendleader.com |
A single Bhungroo - the Gujarati word for a hollow pipe –unit
harvests water for only about 10 days a year, but supplies water for as
long as seven months and ensures food security for five families by
irrigating two crops in two seasons for at least 25 years. Besides, this
non-saline rainwater reduces the salinity of groundwater, making it fit
for agricultural use.
Water has been the leitmotif of Biplab’s life, right from his formative
years in Hooghly, then an idyllic town on the banks of river Ganges, 62
km from Kolkata.
Both his parents earned modest incomes, and the greatest gift they gave
Biplab and his two equally intelligent sisters was the love of books
and empathy for others.
After his graduation and postgraduation in Economics from Jadavpur
University, while studying at the Centre for Environment Education,
Ahmedabad, and working in the Aga Khan Development Network, he was hit
by ground realities of farming in arid rural Gujarat.
Lok Vikas, an NGO, had invited Biplab to provide technical knowhow for
addressing the drinking water problem at Mehsana district of Gujarat. In
2001 while conducting a biodiversity analysis in villages there, he
learnt about the far-reaching effects of water scarcity and
contamination.
In Mehsana there was a peculiar situation: farmers were not allowed to
draw underground water, yet a water park with 1.5 lakh borewells
depleted ground water, pushing the level from 200 feet to 1,200 feet in
just ten years. “The small farmers could not survive in this scenario,”
recalls Biplab.
In 2004 Biplab was invited by the Bureau of Educational & Cultural
Affairs of the US Government as part of the International Visitor
Leadership Program (IVLP). In Miami, Biplab learnt how the city secured
fresh water for residents in its salinity- affected regions.
Image & Article courtesy :theweekendleader.com |
This was the genesis of Bhungroo. “I learnt things that I applied in a constructive way,” says Biplab.
In 2007, Biplab conceptualized the social enterprise Naireeta Services
Private Limited, with his wife Trupti Jain as founder-manager, and
himself as innovator and director, looking after the technology aspects.
Naireeta promotes a social business model that ensures women
empowerment, as each Bhungroo unit has to be owned and managed by women
from small and marginal farmer families. Now there are seven in the
team, along with 17 women farmer volunteers and eight members on an
on-call basis.
The Women Self Help Groups of a village identify the below-poverty-
line women members of a village with the help of Biplab’s team.
A group of five then agrees to their roles in the group and the costs
of maintenance. One of them gives a part of her land for construction of
the Bhungroo while the other members contribute labour, bringing an
added sense of teamwork.
The first Bhungroo units were installed in five villages in Patan
district of Gujarat in 2002 in nine months at nearly Rs. seven lakhs
each.
The current Bhungroo units come in 17 designs and their prices range
from Rs. four to 22 lakhs, based upon 29 variables such as rainfall and
subsoil. Installation of the unit takes a mere three days.
A one-time investment of Rs. 8 to 9 lakh in Bhungroo can generate an
income of Rs. 3 lakh per annum and the investor breaks even after 36
months. It increases a farmer’s agricultural income illustratively from
Rs 11,000 a year to a minimum of Rs 34,000 in three months.
Each Bhungroo unit caters to the irrigation need of 15 acres of land, making that much land productive twice a year.
With several awards and honours such as the Ashoka Globaliser Award for
Innovation in 2012 and 2014, Biplab has received grants, awards and
accreditations from organizations such as the World Bank, the
Commonwealth, the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change,
and the Asian Development Bank.
Bhungroo technology has been replicated widely in Gujarat, Karnataka,
Bihar, Jharkhand, West Bengal and Odisha. Internationally, Bhungroo has
crossed over to Africa (Ghana, Liberia, Kenya), EU countries,
Bangladesh, Cambodia and Vietnam.
Biplab has made Bhungroo not only a reservoir of water, but a reservoir
of hope for poverty alleviation and women empowerment, besides
addressing seminal problems such as crop failure.
Source:theweekendleader.com
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