From: b sabha <bcsabha.kal...@gmail.com>

http://www.hindustantimes.com/mumbai-news/there-isn-t-enough-water-to-interlink-rivers-across-india-iit-study/story-N65MtpqHL0x0YmYeuhH25M.html
[http://www.hindustantimes.com/rf/image_size_640x362/HT/p2/2016/08/08/Pictures/suicides-himself-bombay-student-balkrishna-hostel-hanged_cc4038f6-5d2e-11e6-9d35-61702936114d.JPG]<http://www.hindustantimes.com/mumbai-news/there-isn-t-enough-water-to-interlink-rivers-across-india-iit-study/story-N65MtpqHL0x0YmYeuhH25M.html>

There isn’t enough water to interlink rivers across India 
...<http://www.hindustantimes.com/mumbai-news/there-isn-t-enough-water-to-interlink-rivers-across-india-iit-study/story-N65MtpqHL0x0YmYeuhH25M.html>
www.hindustantimes.com
The government’s ambitious plan to interlink India’s rivers for better 
distribution of water across the country may need to be tweaked to factor in 
the ...




The government’s ambitious plan to interlink India’s rivers for better 
distribution of water across the country may need to be tweaked to factor in 
the effects of climate change.

An analysis of weather data for 103 years (1901 to 2004) by researchers from 
the Indian Institutes of Technology in Mumbai and Chennai shows that rainfall 
has decreased over the years, reducing water stocks even in river basins that 
have a surplus. The data was collected from 1,384 weather stations of the India 
Meteorological Department.

The eight-member team from the Indian Institute of Technology-Bombay (IITB) and 
the Indian Institute of Technology-Madras (IITM) found a significant decrease 
in rainfall – more than 10 per cent each in the major surplus basins of the 
Mahanadi, the Godavari, the Brahmani, the Mahi, the Meghna and the multiple 
small rivers in the Western Ghats and those flowing east. Only the Brahmaputra 
river basin showed no decrease in rainfall.

“One of the plans of interlinking of rivers is supplying water from a surplus 
basin to a deficient one,” said Professor Subimal Ghosh, civil engineering 
department, IITB. “But if the surplus basin itself shows a declining trend of 
water availability, they will find it difficult to both meet their own demands 
and also supply the quantum of water committed to the deficit river basins. The 
project may not be sustainable.”

The team has called for a detailed climate change impact assessment for 
individual river basins that is essential for India’s water management. “One of 
the important aspects (for the variability) could be perturbations in cloud and 
precipitation formation processes due to changes in extrinsic and intrinsic 
properties of atmospheric aerosols,” said Professor Sachin S Gunthe, civil 
engineering department, IITM, adding that detailed studies were needed.

Atmospheric aerosols are fine suspended particles with size range of 50 nm 
(nanometers) to 500 nm that act as a seed for the formation of cloud and 
precipitation.

“This is not an opposition to interlinking rivers. Linking rivers will have an 
ecological impact when building a chain of reservoirs, canals and dams. The 
project therefore should be re-analysed and re-evaluated taking into account 
changes in weather patterns,” said Gunthe. “Such a decrease in surplus river 
basin contradicts the traditional notion that climate change is causing wet 
areas to become wetter and dry areas to become drier over Indian region.”

The analysis found that Indus and Ganga rivers are deficit basins given the 
huge water demand for agriculture, industrial and domestic sectors that are met 
by ground water rather than rainfall.

“Climate model projections are available, and hence projects must be designed 
estimating the availability of water for the next 30 to 40 years. Else, it will 
be a failure,” said Ghosh.



Reply via email to