Category: Environment

  • Champaran’s flood-affected villagers are demolishing their own homes

    Champaran’s flood-affected villagers are demolishing their own homes

    Currently, villagers are either residing in makeshift tents or taking refuge in the government schools. For food, most of them are dependent on the eight community kitchens operating across the Sugauli block…reports Shilpi V.

    It was only two years ago that 52-year-old Akhilesh Kumar, from East Champaran’s Bhawanipur village, had built a single storey house with the money he had earned as a migrant labourer. Back then, he had no inkling of the tragedy that awaited the home that housed his family of seven.

    Then, on July 5, the flooding of the Sikrahna river engulfed several houses in the village. “It all happened so fast that we couldn’t save anything, and our house collapsed like a pack of cards,” narrated Kumar.

    A tributary of the river Ganges, Sikrahna, also known as the Burhi Gandak river, turned turbulent owing to heavy rainfall in the Champaran region. This, coupled with the outflow of water from Valmiki Nagar barrage, has created havoc in several villages of the Sugauli block, about 25 km from district headquarters, Motihari.

    With many houses, like Kumar’s, engulfed by the river and razed to rubble, villagers from Bihar’s Sugauli block in East Champaran district took to demolishing their own dwellings to save the bricks and other construction material from being carried away by the river.

    Demolishing dwellings and dreams

    “My house was built almost 15 years ago with hard-earned money. But half of it was demolished by the river, and we had to tear down the remaining to save whatever little construction material we could,” said Sukhiya Devi, who had taken refuge in a plastic makeshift tent along with six family members.

    Sant Lal Mahato, another villager, described the collapse of his house as an inescapable part of his destiny. “It would be hoping against hope if we do nothing and keep sitting with our fingers crossed. We may be able to build another house with these bricks if land and compensation is provided,” said Mahato.

    Like Mahato, Suresh Prasad hopes for aid from the government. His sons have already removed the corrugated iron sheet roof along with the windows and doorposts of the house that he had constructed 12 years ago. “My dream has been shattered now. We will never be able to stand on our feet if the help from the government doesn’t reach us,” said Prasad with his eyes welling up.

    Over the past month, almost 100 houses in the village have collapsed due to erosion caused by the Sikrahna river, according to Rajesh Yadav, a former sarpanch nominee. “With our village headman no longer alive, there’s no one in power to look into the tragedy that pervades here,” said Yadav, pointing to a 25-meter stretch of barren land that ‘once bustled with people’.

    Rescue and rehabilitation underway

    Amidst the disaster, the people are fighting for their right to live. “Day in and out, we are trying to save some bricks. The earlier, the better, or else, the river is going to spare nothing,” said Shiv Sah.

    As of July 8, Sah is one of the 1.5 lakh people affected by the Sikrahna floods in the ten panchayats of Sugauli block. This was the official tally given by Anil Kumar, Additional District Magistrate, Disaster Management, East Champaran.

    Authorities attribute the damages to the heavy current of water and the absence of an embankment. “It’s not possible to launch the repair work immediately. However, we are doing everything to rush the relief materials to the affected people,” said an official, refusing to be identified.

    Currently, villagers are either residing in makeshift tents or taking refuge in the government schools. For food, most of them are dependent on the eight community kitchens operating across the Sugauli block. “We are keeping a tab on the situation. More community kitchens would be run if required,” said Circle officer, Dharmendra Kumar Gupta.

    The district administration has pressed two NDRF teams along with two private boats and a drone into service. Officials claim that dry ration and about 3,500 plastic sheets have been distributed among affected people. Further, the district administration has also launched an assessment of the collapsed houses. “Compensation for houses would be given as per the laid down rules,” said Shirshat Kapil Ashok, District Magistrate, East Champaran.

    A ‘continued’ displacement

    Meanwhile, floods continue to rampage dwellings in the neighbouring West Champaran as well. Almost 15 families from Biranchi 3 village in Damarapur panchayat in the district’s Mainatand block seem condemned to a life of destitution with their house being engulfed by the Maniyari river.

    During the dead of the night on July 1, 55-year-old Vimal Mitra and his family members were jolted out of sleep when a part of their house collapsed. “It took no time for us to understand what had happened. We rushed out to a safer place with whatever household articles we could lay our hands on,” said Mitra, recalling the harrowing experience. The next day, at the break of dawn, Mitra and several other villagers returned to discover that their houses were nowhere to be found.

    Village sarpanch Hari Das said the residents of Biranchi 3 have been facing the threat of displacement since 1998 because of regular flooding. “We are fighting for our right to live. Men in khaki and officials came, but nothing was done to save us,” said Das, adding that 200 families have been displaced in the last two decades.

    Circle Officer Kumar Rajiv Ranjan claimed that dry rations and other relief materials have been distributed. However, villagers feel that entitlement must be raised. “It’s too meagre to meet our needs,” said Mitra, adding that its relief material received from private individuals like former BJP MLA from West Champaran’s Sikta constituency Dilip Verma, which has kept their “heart and soul together”. Verma provided a sum of Rs 50,000 through his close associate to be spent for victims who were rendered homeless, according to Das.

    (The author is a Bettiah-based freelance journalist and a member of 101Reporters.com, a pan-India network of grassroots reporters.)

  • North India likely to witness intense rainfall July 18-21: IMD

    North India likely to witness intense rainfall July 18-21: IMD

    According to the Met department, isolated extreme heavy rainfall is also very likely over Uttarakhand between July 18 and July 19….reports Asian Lite News

    Northern India is likely to witness intense rainfall activity between Sunday to Wednesday (July 21), and the west coast till July 23, the India Meteorological Department (IMD) forecast on Sunday.

    It has also predicted moderate to severe thunderstorms with lightning at isolated places over Uttar Pradesh, Gujarat, Madhya Pradesh, and east Rajasthan during the next 24 hours, and warned of casualties to people and animals staying outdoors.

    “Rainfall activity is very likely to increase with widespread rainfall to isolated heavy to very heavy rains very likely over the western Himalayan region (Jammu, Kashmir, Ladakh, Gilgit, Baltistan and Muzaffarabad, Himachal Pradesh and Uttarakhand) and adjoining northwest India — Punjab, Haryana, Rajasthan, UP and north Madhya Pradesh — from July 18 to 21,” the IMD said in a statement.

    However, there will be a decrease in rainfall activity over the same regions thereafter, it said.

    According to the Met department, isolated extreme heavy rainfall is also very likely over Uttarakhand between July 18 and July 19.

    Delhi is likely to witness moderate to heavy rainfall, it said.

    Isolated heavy rainfall is likely over east and adjoining central India from July 22 onwards.

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  • Death toll tops 160 in flood-hit Europe

    Death toll tops 160 in flood-hit Europe

    Several power plants operated by German electricity producer RWE have been hit by severe floods worth millions, according to the company, the news agency further reported…reports Asian Lite News.

    The death toll in devastating flooding in western Germany and Belgium rose to over 160 on Saturday after burst rivers and flash floods this week collapsed houses and ripped up roads and power lines.
    Around 143 people died in the flooding in Germany’s worst natural disaster in more than half a century. That included about 98 in the Ahrweiler district south of Cologne, The Straits Times reported quoting police.
    Hundreds of people were still missing or unreachable as several areas were inaccessible due to high water levels while communication in some places was still down.

    FENA reported that German President Frank-Walter Steinmeier also visited Erfstadt, the city most affected by the floods in North Rhine-Westphalia.
    Several power plants operated by German electricity producer RWE have been hit by severe floods worth millions, according to the company, the news agency further reported.
    The downpour was brought to Germany by the Bernd cyclone on Monday. Emergency services, as well as the forces of the Bundeswehr, are involved in the rescue work.
    CNN reported that due to the havoc, at least 165,000 people are currently without power in Rhineland-Palatinate and neighbouring North Rhine-Westphalia, as per the authorities.
    In Netherlands, 10,700 people have been evacuated in Venlo in the north of the southern Dutch province of Limburg on Friday, as a precaution due to the high water level and the fear of flooding.

    The Dutch government has formally assessed the flood in Limburg as a disaster, allowing victims to obtain clarity about whether their damage will be reimbursed by the government if their insurance does not cover it.

    Dutch King Willem-Alexander visited the city and called the situation in Limburg “heartbreaking.”

    In Switzerland, maximum flood warnings have been issued in central parts of the country due to persistent rainfall.

    As of Friday, Lake Lucerne, Lake Thun and Lake Biel have remained at the highest flood warning level (5) after continued and intense rainfall throughout the week.

    The Swissinfo website reported that the major cities such as Basel and Bern are also facing high flood risks, with the River Aare reaching a flow rate of 540 cubic meters per second, nearing the 600 level recorded in the major floods of 2005.

    France’s meteorological service warned on Friday that the continuous rainfall is soaking the soil, putting France at risk of flooding.

    Currently, 13 provinces in northern and eastern France have been placed on orange alert for floods.

    The European Union’s Civil Protection Mechanism has been activated to tackle the heavy floods.
    Meanwhile, moved by the news of flooding in Europe, Tibetan spiritual leader the Dalai Lama has written to German Chancellor Angela Merkel, and Belgian Prime Minister Alexander De Croo to express his concern.

    “I am saddened to see reports of the unprecedented flooding that has wreaked havoc across western Europe, particularly affecting Belgium and Germany,” he wrote.

    “The loss of life, damage to property, and hardship that thousands of people are facing is most upsetting.

    “I understand that every effort is being made to help those affected. I would like to express my condolences to the bereaved and my deep sympathy for those left devastated by this catastrophe. My thoughts are with everyone affected by this calamity.” (ANI/IANS)

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  • Torrential rains clobber Mumbai, paralyse traffic, trains

    Torrential rains clobber Mumbai, paralyse traffic, trains

    Tourism Minister Aaditya Thackeray, who is Mumbai Suburban Guardian Minister, said the situation is being closely monitored…reports Asian Lite News.

    Massive rains pounded Mumbai — in many places measuring over 20 cms (200 mm), paralysing road and rail traffic, all through the night, officials said here on Sunday.

    The Western Railway suburban services were stopped completely due to flooding on tracks at most places in the city and surrounding and many outstation trains were stuck at various locations.

    There was waist-deep water in some parts with water entering ground floor homes or buildings in many low-lying areas.

    The downpour, which started after midnight, continued virtually non-stop and led to waterlogging or flooding in most parts of the city and the Mumbai Metropolitan Region (MMR).

    The BrihanMumbai Municipal Corporation said its rain guages recorded over a staggering 157mm (15.7 cms) in the south Mumbai, 14 cms in eastern suburbs and 13 cms in western suburbs.

    The Maharashtra government, BMC and the coastal Konkan districts of Ratnagiri, Raigad, Palghar, Thane and Raigad are on high alert with the Disaster Management Units in readiness for any eventuality.

    Tourism Minister Aaditya Thackeray, who is Mumbai Suburban Guardian Minister, said the situation is being closely monitored.

    “As of 3 a.m., rainfall measured by IMD. Some places have crossed 200 mm now.A Mumbai has faced an extremely intense system of precipitation accompanied by thundering. The BMC pumps are operational and officers are on ground,” Thackeray said.

    According to KS Hosalikar, Head SID, Climate & Research Services, Pune, said: “Extremely Heavy rainfall realized so far and severe floodings observed due to very very intense spell in a very short time.”

    The IMD has forecast heavy to very heavy rainfall in Mumbai during the day.

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  • UK to decarbonise domestic transport by 2050

    UK to decarbonise domestic transport by 2050

    Cleaner transport will create and support highly skilled jobs, with the production of zero emission road vehicles alone having the potential to support tens of thousands of jobs worth up to 9.7 billion pound GVA in 2050, reports Asian Lite Newsdesk

    Cleaner air, healthier communities and tens of thousands of new green jobs are set to become reality thanks to the UK’s revolutionary transport decarbonisation plan, Transport Secretary Grant Shapps announced on Wednesday.

    With just months to go until major climate summit COP26, the plan provides a world-leading ‘greenprint’ to cut emissions from seas and skies, roads and railways, setting out a credible pathway for the whole transport sector to reach net zero by 2050.

    Cleaner transport will create and support highly skilled jobs, with the production of zero emission road vehicles alone having the potential to support tens of thousands of jobs worth up to 9.7 billion pound GVA in 2050. This will also ensure the air breathe is cleaner in communities and reduce time spent in traffic.

    As part of this vision, the government announced its intention to phase out the sale of new diesel and petrol heavy goods vehicles (HGVs) by 2040, subject to consultation — combined with the 2035 phase out date for polluting cars and vans, this represents a world-leading pledge to phase out all polluting road vehicles within the next two decades.


    The consultation proposes a 2035 phase out date for vehicles weighing from 3.5 to 26 tonnes and 2040 for vehicles weighing more than 26 tonnes — or earlier if a faster transition seems feasible.

    With billions of pounds in investment already pledged including 2 billion pound in cycling and walking and 2.8 billion pound to support industry and motorists to make the switch to cleaner vehicles, the transport decarbonisation plan also sets out how the government will improve public transport and increase support for active travel to make them the natural first choice for all who can take them — creating a net zero rail network by 2050, ensuring net zero domestic aviation emissions by 2040 and leading the transition to green shipping.

    Transport Secretary Grant Shapps said: “Transport is not just how you get around. It is something that fundamentally shapes our towns, cities and countryside, our living standards and our health.

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    “It can shape all those things for good or for bad. Decarbonisation is not just some technocratic process. It’s about how we make sure that transport shapes quality of life and the economy in ways that are good.

    “It’s not about stopping people doing things: it’s about doing the same things differently. We will still fly on holiday, but in more efficient aircraft, using sustainable fuel. We will still drive, but increasingly in zero emission cars.

    “The transport decarbonisation plan is just the start — we will need continued efforts and collaboration to deliver its ambitious commitments, which will ultimately create sustainable economic growth through healthier communities as we build back greener.”

    Elizabeth de Jong, Director of Policy at Logistics UK, said: “The transport decarbonisation plan will help to provide logistics businesses with confidence and clarity on the steps they must take on the pathway to net zero.

    “Consultation on proposed phase out dates for new diesel HGVs should enable business to move forwards with confidence. Rail, shipping and aviation are all essential parts of logistics, so plans to support freight modal shift and develop technologies to reduce emissions across these modes are welcome.”

    The government is also publishing a 2035 delivery plan, which brings together all of the measures for decarbonising cars and vans, from across government, into a single document.

    It outlines the key timelines, milestones and how progress towards the commitment to deliver mass ownership of zero emission cars and vans will be monitored.

    This follows recent investments from car manufacturer Nissan to produce its new-generation electric vehicle in Sunderland, alongside Envision’s new Gigafactory, as well as Stellantis’s investment in Vauxhall’s Ellesmere Port manufacturing plant to transform the site for a new era in electric vehicle manufacturing.

    Aviation has a vital role to play in tackling climate change, which is why the government is also launching the Jet zero consultation, which commits the sector to a net zero emissions target by 2050 and sets out an action plan for how it can be achieved — ensuring everyone can continue to fly for holidays, visits to family and business without contributing to climate change.

    Reflecting the fact the UK aviation industry is already leading the way in seeking to reduce emissions from flights, the consultation proposes an earlier target for the UK domestic aviation to reach net zero by 2040, as well as for all airport operations in England to be zero emission by 2040.

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  • Orange alert in north K’taka, 6 killed so far

    Orange alert in north K’taka, 6 killed so far

    An orange alert has been sounded in these seven districts till July 16, according to the weather department…reports Asian Lite News.

    As the southwest monsoon gathered pace in the north Karnataka region, six persons were killed in rain-related incidents in the state since last week, said the police on Monday.

    North Karnataka is witnessing a heavy downpour since July 6 evening. With monsoon having picked up the pace, Uttara Kannada, Udupi, Dakshina Kannada, Chikkamagaluru, Hassan, Kodagu, and Shivamogga districts are likely to experience heavy showers.

    An orange alert has been sounded in these seven districts till July 16, according to the weather department.

    In Bidar district, which has been witnessing unrelenting rain for the past three to four days, a woman and her daughter were struck dead by lightning at Khudavandpur in Bhalki taluk on Sunday.

    According to the Bhalki police, the incident occurred when Bhagyashree Metre, 32, and her daughter Vaishali, 9, were returning home from their farm.

    Children enjoy heavy rain after scorching heat and humid day in New Delhi, India. (Pallav Paliwal)

    While in Chitradurga, a three-year-old boy, Lohit and his mother, Savitramma, 33, died after the wall of their house collapsed on them.

    “Grievously injured, Savitramma has admitted to a private hospital in Davanagere district died in the wee hours of Monday due to injuries, while her husband, Omkarappa is showing signs of recovery,” the Hosadurga police told reporters.

    The police said that in this episode, an eight-month-old toddler and six-year-old boy of the same family survived unscathed.

    On July 6, a couple was washed away in an overflowing stream along with their bike in Kaalvi village. Mallikarjun, 55, and his wife Sumangalamma, 48, residents of Muthkur in Hagaribommanahalli taluk were returning home after visiting their relatives in Mundargi taluk in Gadag district. Their bodies were found in the stream, after floods subsided, on July 7.

    A spell of sharp showers in the early hours of Sunday left many streams and rivulets in spate rendering several villages inaccessible in many parts of the north-Karnataka region.

    Acres of crops in this region have been damaged due to unrelenting showers.

    Coastal districts — Uttara Kannada, Udupi, and Dakshina Kannada — received bountiful showers on Sunday. The region has been experiencing heavy showers since July 8 evening.

    Most parts of north interior Karnataka is expected to witness thundershowers and a yellow alert has been issued to these districts till July 16, the IMD release said.

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  • UK all set to host COP26 summit in November

    UK all set to host COP26 summit in November

    The COP26 President Alok Sharma said: “The COP26 summit in Glasgow is our best hope of safeguarding the planet for everyone, building a brighter future and keeping the 1.5C target alive.”…reports Asian Lite News.

    World leaders will meet at the COP26 Climate Change Conference in Glasgow on November 1-2, according to the conference’s programme released by the UK government on Wednesday.

    “Beginning with the World Leaders Summit on 1 and 2 November, each day will focus on a different theme, from advancing progress on key priorities like clean energy, zero-emission transport and protecting nature, to ensuring the participation of women, girls and young people is at the centre of climate action,” the government said in a statement.

    The United Kingdom’s Presidency Programme for COP26 has unveiled today to drive forward climate ambition and action against key issues alongside two weeks of intensive climate negotiations in Glasgow.

    Cross-cutting themes like science, innovation and inclusivity will run throughout the programme, as will the need to mitigate climate change, adapt to its impacts, and mobilise public and private finance.

    The Presidency programme will run alongside the formal negotiations, which sit at the heart of the UN summit and will focus on closing off the outstanding aspects of the Paris Agreement, the statement read further.

    The COP26 President Alok Sharma said: “The COP26 summit in Glasgow is our best hope of safeguarding the planet for everyone, building a brighter future and keeping the 1.5C target alive.”

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=92dsohLInDk

    “I have been pleased to see progress and momentum on the four key goals I have been taking to governments across the world and the presidency programme will continue this throughout the two weeks of the summit. From finance to energy and gender to adaptation these are vital issues that need to be addressed to make COP26 inclusive and successful,” he said.

    Countries who are part of the UNFCCC are entitled to attend a COP and will decide what level of representation. (ANI)

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  • Green India Challenge sets record

    Green India Challenge sets record

    Minister Indra Karan Reddy said the pandemic had made people realise the importance of safeguarding the environment and forests…reports Asian Lite News.

    About one million saplings were planted in one hour as part of the Green India Challenge in Telangana on Sunday, setting a new record for the largest such plantation drive anywhere in the world.

    The event led by Telangana Rashtra Samiti Rajya Sabha MP J Santosh Kumar in Adilabad is expected to enter Guinness Book World Records. The earlier record of 3.03 lakh saplings was registered in Turkey in 2019.

    Over 30,000 TRS members, as well as locals, participated in the drive along with Telangana’s forest and environment minister A Indra Karan Reddy, who also marked his birthday with the mammoth plantation event.

    At least five lakh saplings were planted using the Miyawaki model in the degenerated forest area spread over 200 acres.

    The method involves planting two to four trees per square metre. Miyawaki forests reportedly grow in two to three years and are said to be self-sustaining. They help lower temperatures in concrete heat islands, reduce air and noise pollution, attract local birds and insects, and create carbon sinks.

    Minister Indra Karan Reddy said the pandemic had made people realise the importance of safeguarding the environment and forests.

    Ahead of the event Santosh Kumar had made an appeal to the people to make the event a success. “Mother Nature is where our survival is completely dependant upon. Corona has caused immense damage to the environment and we learnt how important is to conserve our natural resources in the last two years. I urge everyone of you to be a part of Green India Challenge. Join hands by planting three saplings and nominating three others to take this forward,” Santosh Kumar had said.

    Green India Challenge was launched with an aim to improve green cover four years ago.

    Since its launch, Green India Challenge – founded by TRS MP Santosh Kumar – has roped in celebrities, politicians, environmentalists, general public alike from across the globe and has been working relentlessly towards planting saplings, adopting and conserving forests, natural resources, encouraging organic farming, creating awareness on the importance of pollutant free environment for our next generations.

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  • Pakistan warned of famine-like situation due to water scarcity

    Pakistan warned of famine-like situation due to water scarcity

    As per the report, water scarcity in the country has set alarm bells ringing after rivers have dried up due to low rainfall….reports Asian Lite News

    Experts have warned that famine-like situation may arise in Pakistan due to the scarcity of water across the country if the issue is not resolved timely, Geo News reported on Sunday.

    As per the report, water scarcity in the country has set alarm bells ringing after rivers have dried up due to low rainfall.

    Citing the sources, Geo News reported that the per capita availability of water in the country is 1,100 million cubic metres per annum — which is dangerously low — while in Punjab one has to go to a depth of 600 feet to draw groundwater. In the past, one had to go to a depth of 50 feet only.

    The report further said that each year, the Kharif and Rabi crops face up to 45 per cent water shortage while the groundwater level in small and big cities across Punjab, including Lahore, has started falling.

    Water experts warn that if new water reservoirs are not created and water wastage is not stopped, Pakistan will face a famine-like situation, Geo News reported.

    According to water experts, due to increasing population, water loss and climate change, the authorities will have to take immediate precautions, otherwise, famine will be inevitable.

    ALSO READ: SPECIAL: Woes of Sindh to Shake Pakistan’s Fragile Ecosystem

    Meanwhile, the President of Pakistan Engineering Congress Amjad Saeed said that the water problem may become more serious in the coming days.

    Earlier, in the month of March, according to a Washington-based magazine, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) has placed Pakistan at the third position in the list of countries facing acute water scarcity.

    Meanwhile, Covid-19 cases in Pakistan continues to rise. With 940 fresh COVID-19 cases and eight deaths in the last 24 hours, Sindh reported the highest number of daily infections since June 2.

    The latest COVID count is up from 694 cases, which were recorded a day earlier, according to a statement issued by the Chief Minister’s office on Sunday.

    As per Dawn, Sindh logged in 1,041 cases on June 2, while Karachi accounted for the majority with 716 cases reported.

    A total of 16,516 samples were tested in the last 24 hours and 157 more patients were recovered from the virus. The provincial total has risen to 3,40,902 cases and the death toll has mounted to 5,520.

    Meanwhile, Pakistan reported more than 1,000 COVID-19 cases in a single day for the fourth consecutive day on Sunday. This comes a few days after the country allowed relaxations in business timings and other measures. (ANI)

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  • Spirit of competition turns barren Pune village green

    Spirit of competition turns barren Pune village green

    Taking note of villagers’ objection to the participation of rural women in community outreach initiatives, especially the need to undergo training in a different district, Sunanda took the lead to convince them…reports Sunil Balasaheb Dhumal.

    Sayambachiwadi in Baramati tehsil in Pune district, once stricken with drought, is now a picnic spot with a large lake and thriving agriculture. The vision of local elected representatives and aid and expertise from the Paani Foundation has helped transform this village into a water surplus one.

    At the epicentre of this transformation is the village lake, spread over 6 acres of land. Manicured lawns slope down the embankment beyond which lies a massive water body in which boating activities were held before the lockdown. Crash guard and drains abutting the asphalted road, fencing, walking track, an open-air gym and benches give this tank bund a plush, well-maintained look.

    Located some 60 km from Pune and 30 km from Baramati, the village is spread over 1,403 hectares with a population of 1,800. The village receives moderate rain even during the monsoon and could harvest only the Kharif crop. Post the monsoon, the villagers had to rely on water tankers even to meet their drinking water needs. Four defunct lakes in the village only worsened the issue. Sayambachiwadi had to shed many inhibitions in order to bring about this change, driven by an outlook of villagers not to be tied down by the vagaries of nature, in general, and the southwest monsoon, in particular.

    The Water Cup

    A gram panchayat decision to participate in the Satyamev Jayate Water Cup organised by the Paani Foundation ushered a turnaround. The competition was hosted annually from 2016 to 2019 and thousands of villages in Maharashtra took part in it. Shramadaan or donation of labour is the key point of this contest in which the villagers put into practice what they learned in the training.

    The idea to pitch their names into the ring came from Sunanda Rajendra Pawar, chairperson, Sharadabai Pawar Girls’ College in Malegaon, Baramati. For seven years, NSS students from the college had been undertaking camps in Sayambachiwadi. As part of these annual camps, the students had constructed seven bunds (an earth bank used to regulate the flow of water) in the village from 2011 to 2017.

    In 2018, when the gram panchayat first considered taking part in the competition, they faced a mental roadblock. The condition that an equal number of contestants had to be women who needed to undergo six-day training for the competition outside their village was met with disapproval and the proposal fell through in the gram sabha.

    Taking note of villagers’ objection to the participation of rural women in community outreach initiatives, especially the need to undergo training in a different district, Sunanda took the lead to convince them. Her intervention on the importance of water conservation increased women’s participation in the project through meetings, study tours, and this collective hard work helped the village overcome their reservations.

    When the proposal was again tabled in 2019, Jaywant Bhapkar and his two friends from the village volunteered. Jaywant said, “At the gram sabha with my friends when no one volunteered for training, we registered our names seeing it as an opportunity for an outing. Since the rule mandated we needed an equal number of women – friend’s wife, a GP member, and a 65-year-old tagged along.”

    Training Day

    “The training was in Bichkool, a village in Satara district, where the welcome overwhelmed me. Different water conservation structures were built there. They helped us understand how these structures worked through demonstrations. We witnessed how a drought-stricken village was now water surplus. All of this changed my casual attitude,” Jaywant said, remembering the training days.

    The returnees shared their Bichkool experience at the gram sabha. But septuagenarian Parubai Narayan Bhapkar remembered that residents of Sayambachiwadi were lukewarm initially to the idea and didn’t commit to participating in the work, believing it would not change things. Prithviraj Lad, the coordinator of Paani Foundation Baramati taluk, helped turn their reluctance into enthusiasm by showing them films of villages that had benefited from the training.

    Participants gradually increased in number. On the eve of work, a torchlight march was taken in the village. Everyone took an oath before the Swayambhu (village deity) to work honestly in the competition. The village ultimately lost out in the competition, but they won in the long term.

    Out of 19 types of structures that could be built as taught in the training, the local geographical conditions permitted only seven of them to be built. Groups were formed and each group was assigned a task. Villagers built continuous contour trenches (CCT) in the barren areas and revived natural water stream paths. Mud from all four defunct ponds was removed and dumped in 50 hectares of fallow land. Absorption pits were built in every house to retain water. Eleven interlinked farm ponds were created which filled up during the monsoon.

    The CCTs, around 6 feet wide and 3 feet deep, which if laid out side to side would stretch out to 9 km, have helped increase the water storage capacity of the lake. Overflow from two such CCTs during the monsoon feeds the lake and the rest recharges the groundwater, which has helped increase the irrigated area to almost three and half times what was before.

    Also, bunds were constructed on 250 hectares of land. With the village receiving copious rainfall in 2019 and 2020, all the old and new water sources in the village started overflowing creating an abundance of water in this once water-scarce village. The area under cultivation in the village was 80 acres in 2017 and this went up to 300 acres in 2020, including 250 acres under sugarcane, a notoriously water-intensive crop.

    “Living in a drought-affected area, I had never cultivated cash crops. But in 2012, I started planting an acre of sugarcane. At that time I had some water in the well, so I added drip irrigation. All the while I was scared about the scarcity of water. After the water conservation work was done for the foundation, my well is full of water. Now I have five acres of sugarcane crop, in which four acres are under drip irrigation. And I don’t worry about water anymore, but I know the value of water,” Appasaheb Bhapkar, a farmer from the village said.

    An era of abundance

    Manohar Bhapkar, a former GP member, said that currently there is plenty of water in the village, which is a great relief to the villagers even during the pandemic. During the competition, he was responsible for managing the suction pits, 260 of which were being constructed in the village. This initiative helped treat wastewater from every household there.

    Suman Suresh Kamble, a former sarpanch said, “Now my village is not drought-prone. In the past, we had to undertake a long trek every day for water and rely on tankers for water. Now our wells are full in summer also. From the gram panchayat fund, we started boating activities in the lake, created a garden around it, a track for exercise and an open gym for citizens. This now attracts people from Baramati and Pune.” Bamboo is also being grown on the embankment and it is expected that these activities will increase the panchayat income.

    The efforts have also helped the village to improve groundwater levels. Lad talks about the village’s water budget which was calculated by accounting for and averaging water use in every household and for each activity. “Sayambachiwadi requires 269 crore litres of water. Before the water conservation in 2018-19, the village had a water deficit of 163 crore litres. After the competition in 2019, the village is left with 53 crore litres of surplus water and water available in wells at 3 meters,” Lad said.

    “This has created a peculiar problem in that farmers have turned to water-intensive sugarcane. Proper planning of available water is essential. Meanwhile, due to the pandemic and lockdown since March 2020, we could not carry out water budgeting at Sayambachiwadi. Water conservation work will be beneficial only if farmers plan their crops by available water according to budget,” Lad added.

    “As part of water budgeting, we are educating farmers to opt for drip irrigation and grow crops with less water. We have drawn up a five-year plan using various sources of funds under which bunds will be constructed on 200 to 250 hectares each year and 2000 saplings planted and nurtured every year, said Pramod Jagtap, who was the interim sarpanch.”

    Sayambachiwadi is now a model for other drought-hit villages with villagers from outside the Pune district undertaking study tours. Rohit Pawar, MLA of Karjat Jamkhed, who visited the village said, “I will strive to implement this project in my constituency. Two groups from Karjat-Jamkhed visited Sayambachiwadi. I like the dedication of villagers, who invest government funds properly.”

    (The author is a Pune-based freelance journalist and a member of 101Reporters.com, a pan-India network of grassroots reporters)

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