India's
stressed water economy faces a turbulent future, as per a recent expert panel
chaired by Mihir Shah, formerly with the Planning Commission. The report is
categorical that if current trends continue, about half the demand for water
would remain unmet by 2030. The reforms panel has called for a 'paradigm shift'
in water management with the involvement of professionals from social sciences,
management and many other specialised disciplines, citing this as one of the
main reasons for recommending the restructuring of engineer-heavy Central Water
Commission (CWC) and Central Ground Water Board (CGWB).
The
seven-member panel headed by Mihir Shah has recommended that CWC and CGWB be
disbanded and a new multidisciplinary National Water Commission be created in
their place. It has called for a shift away from engineering solutions -
creating big dams — to water management and towards a "more people-centred
approach" that leads to rejuvenation of of rivers and aquifers.
The Shah committee was set up last year to recommend ways to restructure the CWC, which
develops surface water projects, and the CGWB, which monitors ground water use and contamination. Its report is the third major report that has been issued on the restructuring of CWC since 2000. It calls for much better managing of our water resources for irrigation, tackling attendant overdependence on groundwater,
overhauling sewage and water supply in urban areas, and economising on industrial usage. While our cities produce about 40,000 mn litres of sewage daily, barely 20 per cent of it is treated. Worse, only 2 per cent of our urban areas have both sewerage systems and sewage treatment plants, which is scandalous. We need subventions and realistic user
charges to fill this gap.
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