All large dams have finite life. What happens to the dams once the useful life of a dam is over? It would need to be decommissioned. Decommissioning of a dam generally refers to[i] complete removal of the dam and its associated structures. This is a very relevant question for India as the third largest dam builder of the world. It becomes even more important as large dams are no longer required or are no longer viable and importance of a flowing river is increasingly appreciated. It needs to be kept in mind that a dam cannot be allowed to remain on the river, without proper maintenance, as such a dam would remain a huge safety hazard for society and economy downstream from the dam.
Continue reading “Dams Decommissioning going up globally”2023: Accidents & Damages to Hydro, Dam Projects in India
(Feature Image: The damaged Chungthang dam on Teesta river in North Sikkim. Source: The Telegraph)
This annual overview compiles the incidents of accidents and disasters that have caused significant damages to the hydro power and dam projects and around them in India during 2023. The report also highlights the incidents of violations of environmental norms at some under construction project sites which could result in manmade disaster in future.
Continue reading “2023: Accidents & Damages to Hydro, Dam Projects in India”DRP 111223: NMCG failure: Wither Ganga Rejuvenation?
(Feature Image: Najafgarh drain at Wazirabad barrage Delhi in June 2023. Bhim Singh Rawat/SANDRP)
A careful reading of the PIB release on the statement of Minister of State for Jal Shakti, Shri Bishweswar Tudu in Rajya Sabha on Dec. 04 regarding Namami Gange Program shows that the NMCG has actually failed to make any significant improvement in cleaning of River Ganga so far. Firstly, the program has been extended upto March 2026 without any course correction during its first 7 years of implementation between June 2014 and March 2021.
Secondly, the program since beginning has primarily been focusing on creation and upgradation of sewage treatment capacity and river bank infrastructures without even looking into the root causes including ineffective and undemocratic governance affecting the ecosystem of Ganga rivers let alone the questions of addressing them.
Continue reading “DRP 111223: NMCG failure: Wither Ganga Rejuvenation?”DRP 041223: Groundwater recharge increased in India?
(Feature Image: Cover photo of the National Compilation of Dynamic Ground Water Resource Assessment Report by CGWB)
There are at least two headline numbers of Government of India’s Dynamic Groundwater Resource Assessment Report 2023 released by Union Minister on Dec 2 2023, that seem counter intuitive and misleading. These are exactly the issues we also raised about the 2022 report too. Firstly, the PIB Press Release that accompanied the report release says India’s annual groundwater recharge in 2023 has increased by 11.48 BCM compared to the same in 2022.
Secondly, it says the groundwater situation has improved in at least 226 of the 6553 assessment Units across the country. Both seem counter intuitive and possibly misleading in the face of increasing groundwater use, depleting levels, worsening quality of groundwater and our increasing over dependence on groundwater.
Continue reading “DRP 041223: Groundwater recharge increased in India?”Lessons for Other River Basins from the Cauvery Dispute
Guest Article by Prof Bhakti Devi
Numerous articles have cropped up explaining the reason behind the Cauvery water inter-state dispute. A remarkable thing to note in these explanations is that every one of the articles focuses on the volumetric allocation of water. Even the documents relating to legal agreements between the two states on how the water of the Cauvery River will be shared focus on the volumetric distribution. Which, on the surface, appears completely logical but seems illogical when you understand the science of how a river gets its water which is the elephant in the room.
Continue reading “Lessons for Other River Basins from the Cauvery Dispute”Preserve the Ecological Integrity of Rivers – statement on Pune River Front development by India River Week 2023
India Rivers Forum (IRF) is a vibrant and active network of organizations and individuals that is committed to the conservation and safeguarding of our rivers against needless and detrimental development. Every year IRF organizes the India Rivers Week (IRW) to raise awareness regarding these issues. This year IRW, organized in Pune, brought together more than 100 practitioners, including representatives from academia and civil society movements, to discuss River Front Development (RFD) unfolding in different parts of the country.
Continue reading “Preserve the Ecological Integrity of Rivers – statement on Pune River Front development by India River Week 2023”DRP 271123: India Rivers Week 2023
(IRW 2023 organizers, participants visiting Pun RFD project on Nov. 26, 2023. Image Source: India Rivers Forum)
The Tenth India River Week function was organized at BAIF, Pune on Nov 25-26, 2023, with participation of over a hundred people. The focus of the event was on Pune River Front Development (RFD), being pushed by Pune Municipal Corporation, and RFD in other cities around India, and it was strongly critiqued and opposed at the meeting, including by Bhagirath Prayas Samman winners Sarang Yadwadkar and Jeevit Nadi. A field visit of the participants was also organized to the proposed site of the work of the project. (Also see: https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/pune/greens-criticize-approval-rfd-project-pune/articleshow/105523479.cms)
Continue reading “DRP 271123: India Rivers Week 2023”India Rivers Week 2023: Bhagirath Prayas Samman to Dibang resistance; Anupam Mishra Medal to Swapan Kumar Bhowmick
At the tenth India Rivers Week function that was inaugurated at BAIF, Pune on Nov 25, 2023, the annual Bhagirath Prayas Samman (BPS) award for exemplary unsung work for river conservation was announced and the award went (jointly) to Bhanu Tatak and Dibang Resistance, both of Dibang River Basin in Arunachal Pradesh, North East India. The Anupam Mishra Medal (AMM) for exemplary media work for the cause of rivers was awarded to Swapan Kumar Bhowmick of Nadia, West Bengal, for this work that started way back in 1977. Both the awards were given away by well-known ecologist, Prof Madhav Gadgil. The BPS award was accompanied by a citation, a shawl and cash component of Rs 60 000. The AMM award was accompanied by a citation, a shawl and a medal.[i]
Continue reading “India Rivers Week 2023: Bhagirath Prayas Samman to Dibang resistance; Anupam Mishra Medal to Swapan Kumar Bhowmick”2023: ‘Cloudburst’ Incidents in J&K, Ladakh & North East
(Feature Image:- Locals walk across a damaged road following flash floods due to cloudburst in the Naginar area of Faqir Gujri, on the outskirts of Srinagar, Saturday, July 22, 2023. Photo: PTI/S. Irfan)
This article is about ‘cloudburst’ incidents that have taken place in Jammu & Kashmir, Ladakah in North West Himalayan states and in Arunachal Pradesh and Sikkim in North East Himalayan states during south west monsoon 2023 season. SANDRP has earlier published detailed analysis on ‘cloudburst’ incidents in Uttarakhand and Himachal Pradesh states in SW Monsoon 2023.
Continue reading “2023: ‘Cloudburst’ Incidents in J&K, Ladakh & North East”WFD 2023: Untreated Effluents with Non-existent Regulation Killing Inland Fish En-Masse
(Fish in large number killed in Krishna river in Sangli in March 2023 due to untreated industrial effluents discharge. Image Source: ToI)
On occasion of World Fisheries Day 2023, incidents of mass fish death in rivers and water bodies in India during past one year are compiled here. The report highlights how untreated effluents from industrial and domestic sources with non-existent regulation have been primarily responsible for most of the en masse fish kill incidents across the country. In the first part of the series, we have covered the positive developments related to fish, fisherfolks and fisheries. And in the second part, we have covered the ongoing resistance and struggles of Indian fishers against developmental projects endangering their survival and livelihoods.
Continue reading “WFD 2023: Untreated Effluents with Non-existent Regulation Killing Inland Fish En-Masse”