Close X
Saturday, October 5, 2024
ADVT 
India

Depleting Ground Water: Dark Reality Under Punjab's Green Landscape

Darpan News Desk IANS, 08 Apr, 2016 12:32 PM
    The green fields of Punjab, which are known to produce a golden harvest year after year to cater to the country's foodgrain needs, have a dark side -- water scarcity.
     
    Large areas in the state are staring at low water availability that has the potential of damaging the state's agrarian livelihood in the coming years.
     
    "Punjab, the land of five rivers, is staring at a dark future on the water front. The ground water level is fast depleting. Tubewells are being bored at between 300 and 400 feet. Every year, the level goes down by 10 feet. The situation is very alarming," farmer Kartar Singh of Bhogpur near Jalandhar told IANS.
     
    This situation prevails in the majority of areas across Punjab. Recent studies and official reports have shown the ground water is depleting alarmingly with concerned farmers saying they have no immediate solutions in sight.
     
    Of the 145 water blocks that Punjab has been divided into, 110 have already been declared "dark zones," state government officials said.
     
    Nearly 45 percent of the blocks have been "notified" by the state government, which means their water can only be utilised for drinking purposes and cannot be used by the agricultural and industrial sectors.
     
     
    Central and north Punjab, known as the Doaba and Majha areas and falling along the course of the Sutlej and Beas rivers, are the worst affected by the depletion of ground water.
     
    "Instead of harping on the SYL canal issue, the state government, if it is serious, should help farmers to adopt new technologies like micro-sprinklers and drip irrigation," agriculturist Khushwant Singh, a past member of the Punjab Agriculture Export Corporation, told IANS.
     
    Officials in the departments concerned admit that no effort for water management and regulation has been made so far, given the alarming situation. Punjab has not even set up an authority to regulate water use.
     
    With the state ready to go to the polls in the next 10 months (February 2017), the government of Chief Minister Parkash Singh Badal is all set to sanction another 250,000 tubewell connections to add to the existing over 1.3 million connections.
     
    "Punjab has to rely heavily on tubewells, as 73 percent of irrigation is being done through them, resulting in fast depletion of the water table. Now the situation has become extremely grave," an official note for a resolution against water-sharing with neighbouring states pointed out last month.
     
     
    "The watering of crops now is a wastage as each plant gets more water than what it requires because old techniques are still practised," agriculturist and member of the board of management of Punjab Agricultural University (PAU)-Ludhiana, Kulwant Singh, told IANS.
     
    He said the "real culprit" was the paddy crop, which was not natural to Punjab. "It guzzles 10 times more water than other kharif crops. Crop diversification and use of modern technologies like micro-sprinklers and drip irrigation are the steps forward to save water," he added.
     
    "Farmers should be encouraged to go in for short duration crops instead of the routine wheat-paddy cycle. Agriculture experts and PAU scientists are concerned about the ground water table going down," he pointed out.
     
    Against the national average of just over 40 percent area under agriculture, Punjab has over 83 percent of cropped area.
     
    Green Revolution state Punjab, which occupies just 1.54 percent of the country's geographical area, contributes nearly 50 percent of foodgrain to the national kitty.

    MORE India ARTICLES

    Jat Protests: Haryana Toll Is 16, Some Areas Still Tense

    Jat Protests: Haryana Toll Is 16, Some Areas Still Tense
    The toll in the violence in the nine-day-old agitation by the Jat community mounted to 16. Over 200 people have been injured in the mindless frenzy that has ravaged the state bordering Delhi.

    Jat Protests: Haryana Toll Is 16, Some Areas Still Tense

    Watch: PM Modi Lauds 104-Yr-Old Woman Who Sold Her Goats To Build Toilet, Touches Her Feet

    Watch: PM Modi Lauds 104-Yr-Old Woman Who Sold Her Goats To Build Toilet, Touches Her Feet
    Modi felicitated Kunwar Bai from Kotabharri village of Dhamtari for her efforts to make her village open defecation free, during the launch of 'Rurban Mission' at Kurrubhat village in the state's Naxal-hit Rajandgaon district.

    Watch: PM Modi Lauds 104-Yr-Old Woman Who Sold Her Goats To Build Toilet, Touches Her Feet

    I Am Not A Terrorist: Umar Khalid Returns To JNU

    I Am Not A Terrorist: Umar Khalid Returns To JNU
    For the first time, I’ve been made to feel like a Muslim: Umar Khalid addressing JNU students

    I Am Not A Terrorist: Umar Khalid Returns To JNU

    10 Killed, 150 Injured In Violence: Jats Cripple Haryana, BJP Promises Reservation

    10 Killed, 150 Injured In Violence: Jats Cripple Haryana, BJP Promises Reservation
    On the eighth day of violent protests by Jats, BJP leader Anil Jain, in charge of party affairs in Haryana, made the announcement in New Delhi after some central ministers and party and Jat leaders met Home Minister Rajnath Singh.

    10 Killed, 150 Injured In Violence: Jats Cripple Haryana, BJP Promises Reservation

    After Exploitation, Additional Flights For Chandigarh, Amritsar

    After Exploitation, Additional Flights For Chandigarh, Amritsar
    Acceding to the demand made by Punjab Chief Minister Parkash Singh Badal, Civil Aviation Minister Ashok Gajjapathi Raju today (Sunday) agreed to start additional flights from Delhi to Chandigarh and Amritsar

    After Exploitation, Additional Flights For Chandigarh, Amritsar

    JNU Student Umar Khalid's Father Allegedly Receives Death Threat From Don Ravi Pujari

    JNU Student Umar Khalid's Father Allegedly Receives Death Threat From Don Ravi Pujari
    He has filed a complaint at the Jamia Nagar police station in this connection.

    JNU Student Umar Khalid's Father Allegedly Receives Death Threat From Don Ravi Pujari