!!! This is a SiteProxy proxied website, do not enter your personal information. Refer to: https://github.com/netptop/siteproxy for details !!!×
Center for Science & Environment CSE Store Equity Watch Gobar Times Down to Earth
Google
  
WWW RWH Search
search for Rain Water Harvesting Systems
Jal Swaraj
Raincentre
Newsletters
Events
RWH Database
  RUNOFF CALCULATOR
  FAQ ON RWH
  TECHNICAL HELPLINE
  GROUNDWATER MAP
  RAINFALL DATA
  WATER LINKS
  DOSSIERS
  THREATENED WETLANDS
  LEGISLATION
   NATIONAL
   INTERNATIONAL
H O W    T O    H A R V E S T
   INDIA
   TRADITIONS
   RURAL CASE STUDIES
   URBAN CASE STUDIES
   INTERNATIONAL
   TRADITIONS
   RURAL CASE STUDIES
   URBAN CASE STUDIES
 
 
 
From Rajkot

(This article appeared in Down to Earth, Dec 15, 2002)

There's trouble brewing in Wankaner - a taluka about 50 kilometres (km) from Rajkot city in district Rajkot, Gujarat - and its not communal riots. Wankaner's farmers are an agitated lot, and have been so for quite a while now. The basis of their ire is severely depleted groundwater. The source of their ire is the water crisis-driven city of Rajkot. The cause is a plan the local administration came up with to plug that crisis.

Rajkot is built in a hard rock strata region, which makes groundwater extraction well-nigh impossible. The city traditionally depended on surface water resources to meet its water demands. The river Aji, on whose banks the city stands, was a major source of water. Four reservoirs - Bhadar, Aji-I and Nyari I and II - used to be the source of municipal water. But lack of rains over a period saw the reservoirs severely depleted, and the city plunged into a perennial thirst.

So it was that the city's municipal corporation decided to survey the surrounding area. They found water in the forest areas of Jamudia village in Wankaner, at the easily plumbable depth of 21-24 metres (m). The Gujarat Water Supply and Sewerage Board (GWSSB) swung into action. It bored 120 wells in the area. In 3 months flat, it laid a 70-km pipeline to bring the water to the city. The Jamudi Wadi area became the city's potable water lifeline, supplying about a million gallons daily. As the water began to be pumped out, villagers of Jamudi and other nearby villages such as Palas and Virdi in the taluka began to face a scarcity completely not of their own making.
 
Conflicts
Water wars
AT A GLANCE
SEE ALSO
 
Back to Top
Copyright © Centre for Science and Environment. All rights reserved.
Site best viewed in 800x600 resolution.