Wisdom for water
Be it Cape Town or Bengaluru, the cities, especially in Global South, need to create a future that is water-secure.
BY Sunita Narain16 March 2018 3:50 PM GMT
Sunita Narain16 March 2018 3:50 PM GMT
Cauvery and Cape Town—one, a river flowing through agricultural fields and booming cities in south India and the other, a modern and prosperous city in South Africa—have much in common. Let's make the connection. Cape Town is on notice that the day when its water will run out is very close. Already, the city is reeling under a water emergency, with politicians asking citizens not to flush or water plants. The question that Cape Town is facing is how will it manage its water more prudently—how will it ensure that the water is supplied to all and the sewage that leaves homes after supply is reused and recycled?
Can Cape Town do this? Can it live with its water endowment? Or will it do what all cities try and do—pipe more water from its surroundings or buy its way into "new" water by desalinating seawater. But will this mean that the cost of water will go up and so, will it then spend more to supply to all, including its poor? Will it then have the funds to treat sewage—remember that 80 per cent of water supplied leaves our homes as waste—and return clean water? The economics of water and waste are crucial in cities of the global South.
These are critical questions. And this is where we must make the link with Cauvery. The February 2018 Supreme Court (SC) decision on the allocation of Cauvery water provides closure on an age-old conflict. But it also raises some inconvenient questions, which will determine how cities manage water prudently and wisely. The SC has modified the directions of the Cauvery Water Dispute Tribunal and allocated additional water for Bengaluru. It has argued that the city "is the seat of intellectual excellence particularly in terms of information technology and commercial flourish". So, instead of the 1.75 thousand million cubic feet (TMC) allocated to the city by the Tribunal, the SC has allocated 6.5 TMC.
The Tribunal, in its calculation of Bengaluru's water allocation, had used the following principles. One, that the city would get only as much allocation as its "rightful" share—only one-third of the city fell within the Cauvery basin, and so, only one-third of its water demand would be met from the river. The SC has overturned that, arguing that cities like Bengaluru deserve more water regardless of their location. Therefore, it has, in effect, agreed that cities have the "right" to a trans-boundary water supply.
The second principle established by the Tribunal was that groundwater—replenished through natural recharge, stream flow and through lakes and reservoirs—would meet 50 per cent of the city's water demand. Only 50 per cent would be allocated from the river. But the SC has dismissed this saying, "this assumption is unacceptable". This is extremely unfortunate. The fact is that Bengaluru is a classic case of a city that is deliberately and willfully destroying its lakes. These were the sponges of the city, which would recharge groundwater and allow it to build on its rainwater endowment. Now, the SC has, in effect, said that the city does not need to bother about its lakes as it does not need to depend on groundwater for its water supply. Instead, what should have been demanded is that the city first uses its own local water sources and only meets the deficit from the imported and transported Cauvery water.
This would also be important as the transportation of the Cauvery water is already bleeding the city and making water so costly that more and more people are switching to groundwater. So, it is a double whammy. The city will disregard its local water sources and its people will have no option but to extract—overuse this source. Be clear, Bengaluru has not gained from this allocation. It will lose, whatever its politicians say today.
The third principle—this one upheld by the SC—is that the city's water demand will be calculated only at 20 per cent. In other words, this is what the city "consumes". The remaining 80 per cent of the water that is demanded and supplied is discharged in terms of waste. It is not consumed. This means that the city has to plan now deliberately to take back this sewage water and to treat it, clean it and reuse it.
This is where all water sums are going wrong. Tamil Nadu, the state downstream and Chennai, the other metropolis at the end of the Cauvery waterline, complained that Karnataka is not giving it water, only sewage. And this is where Bengaluru will have to change.
The SC has also said that drinking water will get the highest priority in terms of allocation—it will be prioritised over the demand of water by agriculture and food. This portends for new water conflicts. We have to remember that in countries like India, a vast number of people still get their employment from agriculture and so, water is used in rural areas. But in the west, where people have moved away from agriculture and indeed moved away from rural to urban, water is used in cities and industries.
All in all, as I said, not much difference. Cape Town, Bengaluru, and Chennai, all have a common present. The question is if they can create a new future that is water-secure because it is water-wise.
(The author is Director General of Centre for Science and Environment and the Editor of Down To Earth magazine. The views expressed are strictly personal)
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