On 11 March, panic struck engineers at a giant power station on the banks of the Ganges river in West Bengal state.
Image & Article courtesy : BBC |
Readings
showed that the water level in the canal connecting the river to the
plant was going down rapidly. Water is used to produce steam to run the
turbines and for cooling vital equipment of coal-fired power stations.
By
next day, authorities were forced to suspend generation at the
2,300-megawatt plant in Farakka town causing shortages in India's power
grid. Next, the vast township on the river, where more than 1,000
families of plant workers live, ran out of water. Thousands of bottles
of packaged drinking water were distributed to residents, and fire
engines rushed to the river to extract water for cooking and cleaning.
'Shortage of water'
The power
station - one of the 41 run by the state-owned National Thermal Power
Corporation, which generates a quarter of India's electricity - was shut
for 10 days, unprecedented in its 30-year history.
"Never before have we shut down the plant because of a shortage of water," says Milan Kumar, a senior plant official.
"We are being told by the authorities that water levels in the river have receded, and that they can do very little."
Further
downstream, say locals, ferries were suspended and sandbars emerged on
the river. Some 13 barges carrying imported coal to the power station
were stranded midstream because of insufficient water. Children were
seen playing on a near-dry river bed.
Nobody is sure why the water level on the Ganges receded at Farakka,
where India built a barrage in the 1970s to divert water away from
Bangladesh. Much later, in the mid-1990s, the countries signed a 30-year
agreement to share water. (The precipitous decline in water levels
happened during a 10-day cycle when India is bound by the pact to divert
most of the water to Bangladesh. The fall in level left India with much
less water than usual.)
Monsoon rains have been scanty in India
for the second year in succession. The melting of snow in the Himalayas -
the mountain holds the world's largest body of ice outside the polar
caps and contributes up to 15% of the river flow - has been delayed this
year, says SK Haldar, general manager of the barrage. "There are
fluctuations like this every year," he says.
'Filthy river'
But the evidence
about the declining water levels and waning health of the 2,500km (1,553
miles)-long Ganges, which supports a quarter of India's 1.3 billion
people, is mounting.
Part of a river's water level is determined
by the groundwater reserves in the area drained by it and the duration
and intensity of monsoon rains. Water tables have been declining in the
Ganges basin due to the reckless extraction of groundwater. Much of the
groundwater is, anyway, already contaminated with arsenic and fluoride. A
controversial UN climate report said the Himalayan glaciers could melt to a fifth of the current levels by 2035.
Emmanuel
Theophilus and his son, Theo, kayaked on the Ganges during their
87-day, 2,500km journey of India's rivers last year. They asked
fishermen and people living on the river what had changed most about it.
"All of them said there had been a reduction in water levels over the
years. Also when we were sailing on the Ganges, we did not find a
single turtle. The river was so dirty that it stank. There were
effluents, sewage and dead bodies floating," says Mr Theophilus.
The
waning health of the sacred river underscores the rising crisis of
water in India. Two successive bad monsoons have already led to a
drought-like situation, and river basins are facing water shortages.
Water conflicts
The
three-month-long summer is barely weeks away but water availability in
India's 91 reservoirs is at its lowest in a decade, with stocks at a
paltry 29% of their total storage capacity,
according to the Central Water Commission. Some 85% of the country's
drinking water comes from aquifers, but their levels are falling,
according to WaterAid.
No wonder then that conflicts over water are on the rise.
Thousands
of villagers in drought-hit region of Maharashtra depend on tankers for
water; and authorities in Latur district, fearing violence, have imposed prohibitory orders on gatherings of more than five people around storage tanks. Tens of thousands of farmers and livestock have moved to camps providing free fodder and water for animals in parched districts. The government has asked local municipalities to stop supplying water to swimming pools.
States like Punjab are squabbling over ownership of river waters. In water-scarce Orissa, farmers have reportedly breached embankments to save their crops.
"We would dive into the canal earlier for a swim," says a villager. Not far away, near the shores of the Ganges, fisherman Balai Haldar looks at his meagre catch of prawns and bemoans the lack of water.
'Unthinkable'
"The
river has very little water these days. It is also running out of fish.
Tube wells in our village have run out of water," he says. "There's too
much of uncertainty. People in our villages have moved to the cities to
look for work."
It is a concern you hear a lot on the river these
days. At the power plant, Milan Kumar says he is "afraid that this can
happen again".
"We are being told that water levels in the Ganges
have declined by a fourth. Being located on the banks of one of the
world's largest rivers, we never thought we would face a scarcity of
water.
"The unthinkable is happening."
source:BBC
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