The Vice President of India
Shri M. Hamid Ansari has said that Water management systems have traditionally
reflected existing socio-economic structures and governance mechanisms. The key
challenges to water management today stem from changing demographics, shifting
geo-politics, wide-spread poverty and under-development, climate change
phenomena and shifting weather patterns, and the elements of globalization and
its attendant consequences. Delivering inaugural address at “India Water
Forum-2011” and the “International Water Convention on Water Security
and Climate Change : Challenges and Opportunities” here today, he has said that
those formulating public policy
regarding this vital resource must therefore cater to essential requirement and
ensure sustainability of eco systems so that there is availability of adequate
water for every one. Prevention of greed, of waste and of conspicuous
consumption must remain high on their agenda.
Shri Ansari has said that Water
stress and scarcity would have a significant impact on the prospects of Indian
companies operating in various sectors including agriculture and agro-industry,
irrigation, mining, pulp and paper, iron and steel, and power generation.
Regulators, investors and citizens alike must demand corporate water
disclosure, including plans and policies for water consumption, use and
disposal and whether environmental concerns have been addressed.
Following
is the text of the Vice President’s inaugural address :
“The Energy and Resources Institute has a
formidable reputation and I am happy to participate in today’s function
organized in association with the Ministry of Water Resources of the Government
of India. It is very appropriate that the theme of this first international
convention is the challenges and opportunities of dealing with the twin issues
of water security and climate change.
Water is an essential building block of
life. Existence would be unimaginable without it. An Urdu poet had summed up
the human sentiment about it:
Yeh aab o baad o khak ka jahan bahut haseen
hai
Agar koi bahisht hai to bus yehi
zameen hai
Beautiful is this world of water, air and
dust
If there is a paradise
then this indeed it is.
In our world of today, water is a
critical national asset with geo-political and geo-strategic import. Water
resources often transcend national boundaries. Successful public policy
therefore has to be premised on establishing cooperative partnerships between
governments, business and industry, non governmental and civil society organizations
and, above all, the individual users.
Water
management systems have traditionally reflected existing socio-economic
structures and governance mechanisms. The key challenges to water management
today stem from changing demographics, shifting geo-politics, wide-spread
poverty and under-development, climate change phenomena and shifting weather
patterns, and the elements of globalization and its attendant consequences.
Those formulating public policy regarding
this vital resource must therefore cater to essential requirement and ensure
sustainability of eco systems so that there is availability of adequate water
for every one. Prevention of greed, of waste and of conspicuous consumption
must remain high on their agenda.
At the outset, it would be useful to look
at some figures regarding our water resources.
India has 2.4 per cent of the world’s
area, 16 per cent of the world’s population but only 4 per cent of the total
available fresh water. Our main water resources consist of annual precipitation
of around four thousand cubic kilometers and a broad estimate of trans-boundary
flows from upper riparian neighbours of around five hundred cubic kilometers. Out
of the total precipitation, annual availability from surface and ground water
is estimated at 1869 cubic kilometers.
However, only 60 per cent of this at 1123
cubic kilometers is estimated to be capable of being put to beneficial use, 690
cubic kilometers of which is surface water and 433 cubic kilometers being replenish-able
ground water.
The twin indicators of water scarcity are
per capita availability and storage. Our population has increased from 361
million in 1951 to 1.21 billion in 2011. Accordingly, the per capita
availability of water for the country as a whole has decreased from 5177 cubic
metres per annum in 1951 to 1544 cubic metres per annum in 2011, a drastic
reduction of 70 per cent in sixty years. This meets the definition of a
water-stressed condition which is per capita availability of less than 1700
cubic metres.
The situation is even more serious when
we look at individual river basins. Nine out of twenty river basins in the
country, with a population of over 200 million, meet the definition of water
scarcity of a per capita availability of less than 1000 cubic metres.
We fare no better regarding the other
indicator of storage. According to the 11th Five Year Plan document,
per capita water storage in the country is 213 cubic metres, as against over
6000 in Russia, 4700 in Australia, 1100 in China and 1960 in the United
States.
It is estimated that by the year 2050, as
per existing water use practices, overall demand for water resources would be
1447 cubic kilometers, around 30 per cent higher than assessed utilizable water
of 1123 cubic kilometers. It is evident that only the adoption of better
governance practices and enhanced efficiency would reduce this demand.
The annual extraction of groundwater in
India at 210 cubic kilometers is the highest in the world. It provides for over
60 per cent of net irrigated area and has accounted for over 85 per cent of the
addition to irrigated area in the last three decades.
The growing dependence on ground water
has been at the cost of unsustainable over-extraction in at least a third of
total area and population of the country, which has lowered the water table and
adversely impacted rural drinking water.
For example, in a six year period, ground water depletion in Rajasthan,
Punjab, Haryana and Delhi was 109 cubic kilometers, double the capacity of
India’s largest surface water reservoir.
Finally, we must note that irrigation
accounts for 85 per cent of water requirement, whereas drinking water accounts
for 7 per cent with industrial, energy and other uses being of a smaller scale.
This
data makes disturbing reading. It suggests that analysis and policy regarding irrigation
is central to sustainable water management.
The picture of water security across the
country is indeed one of major concern. Water availability and water quality
issues plague the majority of citizens in both rural and urban areas. Gross
irrigated area is not rising commensurate with our huge investments, with a big
gap between potential created for irrigation and potential that is actually
utilized. The problem of floods has been exacerbated due to degradation of
catchment areas and loss of flood plains to urban development and agriculture.
Water conflict has taken new forms with more menacing consequences.
Climate change issues have further
complicated the water calculus. It is likely to alter precipitation received in
our territory, the hydrology of catchments in upper riparian neighbouring
countries, and the distribution and quality of water resources in the country.
The threats and challenges are
significant and immediate. We have recognized and responded to the threat of
water insecurity emanating from climate change. The National Water Mission has
been established under the National Action Plan for Climate Change for
‘conservation of water, minimizing wastage and ensuring its more equitable
distribution both across and within States through integrated water resources
development and management’. It has suggested specific action points and has
sought policy modifications in view of climate change concerns. Five of these
merit close attention:
First, it has sought comprehensive reform on
regulation of water resources. Such public regulation must ensure that the
right of citizens and residents to minimum essential water supplies for health
and hygiene is ensured; available water is equitably distributed across regions
and categories of users; monitoring is done to ensure compliance with
allocation and water quality; that there is creation, review and modification
of water rights for various categories of users; create water prices for different uses; and
create a system of penalties for polluting surface and ground water resources.
Second, policy planning must consider water as
a unified resource, with the quantified hydraulic cycle becoming the main tool
for understanding the water situation. Management of rain water and evaporation
should supplement current strategies of managing rivers and aquifers. Thus,
water balances, water budgeting, water accounting and water audits should be
based on the hydraulic cycle and the interaction between rain water, surface
water, ground water and evaporation.
Third, there is a need to establish
legally-empowered, stakeholder-managed Basin Authorities with wide powers for
approving development and management plans and tackling emergencies and tasked
with reducing conflicts and imposing penalties for misuse of water resources.
Fourth, improving water use efficiency in
irrigation is critical for water management. For each large irrigation system,
benchmarking and performance evaluation studies for each water year with
complete water budget and efficiency related data should be put in the public
domain for transparency and accountability. Subsidies should encourage
irrigation efficiencies through piped and drip irrigation, and constructing
storages for irrigation water at the user’s end. Participatory management of
irrigation systems would increase equity and reliability and reduce losses due
to over irrigation.
Fifth, we need to launch a coordinated and
time bound programme to improve the analytical capabilities of our water
resource personnel in the various public and private agencies at the national,
state and local government levels.
I fear that in regard to water we are
living in the past and too many of us take water for granted. Like climate
change, the idea of water scarcity must seep into consciousness and through it
to the institutions and mechanisms of global and national governance and
business and industry. The need to address the complexities of water management
in the context of climate change is imperative.
Water shortages affect the most unlikely
of industries. For example, severe water shortages and high water temperatures in
2003 in France led to the shut down or scaling down of production at the 58
nuclear power stations responsible for supplying over 75 per cent of total
electricity. If nations and peoples ration the use of water for industrial
purposes or change the pricing for such use, there would be significant changes
in the business environment.
Water stress and scarcity would have a
significant impact on the prospects of Indian companies operating in various
sectors including agriculture and agro-industry, irrigation, mining, pulp and
paper, iron and steel, and power generation. Regulators, investors and citizens
alike must demand corporate water disclosure, including plans and policies for
water consumption, use and disposal and whether environmental concerns have
been addressed.
Today’s convention, I venture to hope, would
contribute to the realization that water scarcity affects individuals,
businesses and the national economy, that water is central to poverty
alleviation and citizen empowerment, and that better water governance is a
shared enterprise between all stakeholders - citizens, governments, civil
society and industry.
I thank Dr. Pachauri for inviting me to
inaugurate the India Water Forum and wish you all success in your
deliberations. ”
SK