WATER SCARCITY: IMPACT AND 
SOLUTIONS 
#Environment #Conservation
WHY THIS TOPIC? 
As per the NITI Aayog report, around 60 crore people in India 
are facing water scarcity. Even Chennai, a major metropolis is 
facing the crisis and also the millennium city, Gurgaon. If this, 
continues then it is going to impact the entire country by 
2030. So, the need of the hour is wholesome state and non-
state actors participation in water conservation. 
INTRODUCTION 
Problems are huge as precious evolutionary living resources, 
natural infrastructure, are going extinct. While we 
thoughtlessly build artificial infrastructure, we forget that this 
kills natural infrastructure which took evolution aeons to 
create and cannot be engineered. We are missing the 
essential point that this is our lifeline on the planet. Forests, 
rivers, mountains, aquifers and soil are being lost at an 
alarming rate. Today, India is in the midst of a suicidal water 
crisis as urban and rural landscapes go thirsty. 
Over the years, we have seen activists, scientists and experts 
from across India working on bottom-up schemes to revive 
and rejuvenate lakes, wetlands, streams and other small 
water bodies. While these movements have brought about a 
significant change at the local level, the scale of our water 
problems is much larger. 
MAIN BODY 
Here we have two intractable issues. First, cities today are 
vast agglomerations that continue to spread, with bursting 
populations of tens of millions. They are huge parasites on 
water, food, energy and all other resources. High densities of 
our cities do not allow for water harvesting to fill the gap. 
Until now, invasive schemes like dams to service these large 
cities and the huge needs of agriculture have caused extreme 
ecological devastation. 
Second, in our global market economies, the products and 
services that are derived from natural infrastructure have 
often led to the terminal loss of the source itself. The global 
free market, and with it the scale of human intervention, now 
exceeds the scale of the planet. These resources (forests, 
mountains, floodplains and rivers) are often lost to the greed 
of governments, institutions, corporations and individuals. 
This is long-term loss for short- term gain. Natural resources 
are living evolutionary resources that are constantly renewed 
by natural cycles. Therefore, they provide us perennial value 
as long as we use them with natural wisdom and not kill them 
with exploitation — which is the order of the day. 
Groundwater plays an important role in our lives and India’s 
economy, but it is disappearing fast. There is mounting 
evidence that we are extracting more than can be naturally 
replenished. In the hard-rock aquifers of peninsular India, 
drilling 800 ft. or deeper is becoming the norm. Groundwater-
dependent towns and villages spend an increasing fraction of 
their budgets chasing the water table. Stories abound of 
farmers spending their life savings or taking loans to drill a 
borewell, but failing to find water. If we “run out” of 
groundwater, millions of people will be left without any 
means to sustain themselves. 
Scientific evidence also points to over-exploitation. The 
Central Ground Water Board classifies all blocks in India 
based on the fraction of recharge that is extracted and trends 
in long-term groundwater levels. Since 2004, almost a third of 
blocks have been classified “over-exploited” or “semi-critical”. 
If we understand the problem and if the consequences are so 
severe, why are we unable to address it? The answer lies 
partly in politics, partly in the invisible nature of groundwater, 
and partly in our reliance on simple techno-economic fixes. 
Flawed regulatory structure: Electricity is supplied to 
farmers free of cost. This policy made sense when 
groundwater was abundant in the 1980s. Indeed, it helped 
millions of farmers escape poverty. But today, where 
groundwater levels have fallen hundreds of feet below the 
ground, the subsidy is actually only utilised by the richest 
farmers who can afford to drill deep. And even so, not all are 
lucky enough to strike water. Access to groundwater in hard-
rock regions has almost become a lottery. Yet in the absence 
of alternative water sources, charging farmers for electricity is 
seen as political suicide.
Groundwater is inherently difficult to monitor and control, in 
part because of its invisibility, which also perpetuates the 
illusion that each well is independent. The myth is enshrined 
in Indian groundwater law that allows landowners to extract 
as much as they want. In reality, not only is groundwater 
within an aquifer interconnected, but aquifers and rivers are 
also interconnected. So depleting groundwater means drying 
rivers. Despite this, groundwater and rivers are regulated by 
different agencies that do not properly account for the 
linkages between them, often double counting the quantum 
of the resource. 
Much of the current action on the ground is through techno-
economic fixes. These have clear benefits in terms of 
reducing pumping costs and using local aquifers instead ofbuilding big, expensive dams. But what they do not do is 
create “new” water. 
Solution can be floodplain. Research has shown that 
floodplains of rivers are exceptional aquifers where any 
withdrawal is compensated by gravity flow from a large 
surrounding area and can be used as a source of providing 
water to cities. Floodplains are formed over millions of years 
by the flooding of rivers with deposition of sand on 
riverbanks. Some floodplains, such as those of Himalayan 
rivers, contain up to 20 times more water than the virgin flow 
in rivers in a year. Since recharge is by rainfall and during late 
floods, the water quality is good. If we conserve and use the 
floodplain, it can be a self-sustaining aquifer wherein every 
year, the river and floodplain are preserved in the same 
healthy condition as the year before. 
The Delhi Palla floodplain project on the Yamuna is an 
example of this. By utilising 20 sq.km of the river length and 
running at half its capacity, it provides water to almost a 
million people daily. Piezometers and a control system have 
been installed to monitor water levels and other parameters 
through the year, to ensure sustainable withdrawal. Besides, 
it provides huge revenue to the Delhi Jal Board. 
Preserving the floodplain in a pristine condition is essential 
for this scheme to work. Land on the floodplains can be 
leased from farmers in return for a fixed income from the 
water sold to cities. The farmers can be encouraged to grow 
orchards/food forests to secure and restore the ecological 
balance of the river ecosystem. 
Currently, mineral water is brought from faraway mountain 
springs, putting huge pressure on the mountains. It is 
packaged and consumed in plastic bottles that end up in 
landfills. Forested hills are a result of evolution over millions 
of years. They are not polluted and sit on a treasure of 
underground aquifers that contain natural mineral water 
comparable to that found in a mountain spring. This is 
because the rain falls on the forest and seeps through the 
various layers of humus and cracked rock pathways, picking 
up nutrients and minerals and flows into underground 
mineral water aquifers. 
Research shows that the water in these aquifers is 
comparable to several international natural spring mineral 
waters. It also shows that if a scheme of ‘conserve and use’ is 
applied correctly, it would allow a forest (like Asola Bhatti in 
Delhi) to be sustained as a mineral water sanctuary. About 30 
sq.km of the forest could then provide enough natural 
mineral water to 5 million people in the city. The Aravalli 
forested hills can provide mineral water to all major towns of 
Rajasthan. This water can substantially improve the health of 
citizens and preserve forests at the same time. The marvel is 
that we can provide quality natural mineral water for all from 
a local forest tract for 20 times less than the market price and 
yet reap great economic returns. 
Such non-invasive, local, large-scale ‘conserve and use’ 
projects till now have not been part of our living scheme. 
They change the relationship between nature, water and 
cities. They differ in scale from the small, community-driven 
projects of check dams, water harvesting and lakes and can 
service large populations. Unlike large-scale dams, these 
projects work with nature rather than against it. They can be 
used around the globe. If we were to recognise the true value 
of our natural infrastructure and ‘conserve and use’ our 
evolutionary resources with the help of science, it would 
secure the future for humanity and the natural world. 
Further, boosting recharge through rainwater harvesting 
structures such as small check dams is a popular measure. 
Another technological solution is to improve efficiency 
through subsidised drip irrigation or energy-saving pumps. 
CONCLUSION
The way forward is comprehensive water budgeting, 
simultaneously in each watershed and the river basin as a 
whole. Water budgets at the watershed level will inform 
communities about how much water they have, so it can be 
equitably shared within communities. Water budgets for the 
river basin will inform communities how much must be left 
for downstream users, ensuring that water resources are 
allocated between communities fairly and transparently. 
Given the zero-sum nature of the game and the impossibility 
of creating “new” water, it is likely that we cannot restore the 
water balance in severely depleted regions without painful 
cuts in water use. However, there are some glimmers of 
hope. Water users everywhere are worried about the 
disappearing resource and willing to engage. The trick lies in 
combining technology (low-water-use crops, xeriscaping) and 
economic incentives that reduce actual water use (“cash-for-
blue” schemes) without reducing productivity or quality of 
life. This needs a strong water governance system based on 
awareness building, science and a commitment to fairness 
and sustainability.