Will Bangalore have to be evacuated by 2023?

gopi_vbboy

Cyborg Agent
Indeed a wakeup call about water scarcity.

*www.firstpost.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/04/Bangalore-water-AFP.jpg

“The Government of Karnataka will have to evacuate half of Bangalore in the next ten years, due to water scarcity, contamination of water and diseases.”

It is an ominous prophecy from V Balasubramanian, the former Additional Chief Secretary of Karnataka and Chairman, Centre for Policies and Practices, who conducted an elaborate study of the water woes of the state capital.

Bangaloreans would do well not to dismiss Balasubramanian’s peep into the future as an exaggeration of a worried mind. It is corroborated by the lab results at the Public Health Institute, and the Department of Mines and Geology of the Karnataka government. The results reveal that 52 per cent of the borewell water, and 59 per cent of tap water in Bangalore, is not potable and contain 8.4 per cent and 19 per cent E.coli bacteria respectively.

The reason: the groundwater in at least half of Bangalore is contaminated with sewage water. In 1790, a British captain had described Bangalore as the land of a thousand lakes. Today less than 200 of those 1000 lakes remain and are no more than sewage tanks. The sewage water contaminates the ground water and percolates into the borewells.

For those wondering where the 800-odd lakes disappeared, one just has to drive around Bangalore to say, JP Nagar 4th Phase, which was in fact the Sarakki Agrahara lake. Or to the Kanteerava stadium where the Sampangi lake once existed. Or Banakshankari 2nd stage (Kadirenahalli lake), Kempegowda bus terminal (Dharmabudhi lake), National Dairy Research institute (Koramangala lake), HSR Layout (Parangipalya lake) and more. You are unlikely to find any epitaphs to what was clearly a better city to live in.

“The 850 km of storm water drains meant to carry surplus water from higher elevation lakes to lower levels in a cascading system of natural rainwater harvesting, now instead carry the city’s sewage into these existing so-called lakes,” said Balasubramanian.

“Only 30 per cent of the sewage is treated by the sewage treatment plants and the rest flows into the existing lakes,” he said.

Travel in any direction in the suburbs in Bangalore and all you can see is construction activity. Your picture of a beautiful life cracks the moment you enquire about the water supply in an area from those already living there. The city’s population rose from 53 lakh in 2001 to 87 lakh in 2011 and at the present rate of growth, is likely to touch one crore by 2016. Unfortunately the amount of water in the Cauvery hasn’t increased by the same proportions.

It would help if those in charge of supplying water to Bangalore would also care to plug the leaks in water supply. An estimated 35 percent of water meant for the city is wasted in leakages. This means of the 1400 million litres per day (MLD) that Bangalore draws, nearly 500 MLD is lost as leakage, and with 150 MLD allotted to industries, one crore Bangaloreans will have to make do with 750 MLD everyday in 2016. This will work out to 75 litres per capita per day (LPCD) while the Government of India norm for metro cities is 150 LPCD. Clearly there is a huge mismatch between demand and supply of water from the Cauvery.

Bangalore gets an annual rainfall of 900 mm. But the use of over 3 lakh borewells in the city to draw ground water amounts to almost three and a half times water drawn than the amount received to recharge it. Hence, it comes as no surprise then that most borewells have gone deeper, even up to 1000 feet and the ones which aren’t as deep have run dry. The greater fear is that even this polluted water may not be available after 2018.

And rainwater harvesting is merely symbolic in the Garden city. Out of 18 lakh properties, only 44,000 houses have rainwater harvesting structures.

Most residential properties then rely on water supplied through tankers, that have emerged as one of the most powerful lobbies in Bangalore. It is such a booming business, that there have been instances of the water tanker mafia using force to prevent residential societies from digging borewells to reduce their expenditure on water supplied by them.

When SM Krishna was chief minister, he spoke of making Bangalore another Singapore. In a sense, his wish has come true because Bangalore today, just like Singapore, uses sewage water. The difference, however, is that while Singapore treats its sewage and produces what it calls ‘new water’, Bangalore is forced to use untreated sewage water.

In its report in January 2010, the Agenda for Bengaluru Infrastructure and Development (ABIDe) Task Force suggested rejuvenating the lakes in the region, as part a Bangalore Water 2020 blueprint. It also asked for focus on recycling of water, adding “a specific target should be set for the quantity of water that can be supplied from lakes by 2012. The goal for obtaining 500 MLD from the Integrated Water Management project may be set as the initial target.”

Three years on, very little of it has translated into action and Bangalore continues to sit on a ticking time bomb without realising it will explode in its face one day.

“A city dies when its lakes die. Today Bangalore is growing without realising it is actually dying,” laments Balasubramanian.

Source:Firstpost
 

Theodre

In the zone
That's actually scary!! Especially for the guys like me trying to get a job on the IT Hub!! There is a better solution though, JUST LEAVE INDIA!! With all the politics and things like these!! (not jokin at all)
 
OP
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gopi_vbboy

Cyborg Agent
@nikin yes leaving india is easy solution.Everyone are after it.

But face the challenge and improving the situation is what india needs today which no one is ready for.
 

Flash

Lost in speed
What good will a city be, if its basic infrastructure is not suitable for the people to live in peace?
It's high-time to get started..

To me, the pollution (air) is mainly because of increasing automobiles
 

theserpent

Firecracker to the moon
Yup, might be true..Few years back Bangalore had many many lakes now I dont think it has half the lakes it had.
Why can't they preserve the lakes?Make artificial lakes? Start rain water harvesting?
Instead of 100's of slum dwelling near lakes, they can build flats nearby shift them there, and develop the lakes
 
OP
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gopi_vbboy

Cyborg Agent
1.I think all indian metros should have to introduce compulsory rain water harvesting to cope up to some extent.

2.We waste so much water in floods.River linking project has to be the long term solution.
 

Flash

Lost in speed
Rain water harvesting is the one-good-step ever taken by Tamilnadu Government..
Because of that, people from TN (especially Chennai & its neighboring places) can handle water-scarcity well in difficult times.

Govt. should mandate "Rain water harvesting", then only this problem will solve.
And rainwater harvesting is merely symbolic in the Garden city. Out of 18 lakh properties, only 44,000 houses have rainwater harvesting structures.
 

quagmire

Allllright !
Rain water harvesting is the one-good-step ever taken by Tamilnadu Government..
Because of that, people from TN (especially Chennai & its neighboring places) can handle water-scarcity well in difficult times.

Govt. should mandate "Rain water harvesting", then only this problem will solve.

:+1: Its high time such a thing became mandatory!

Aamir Khan show Satyameva Jayate had showcased innovative methods of water harvesting at low cost..
 

Vignesh B

Youngling
That's indeed scary.
But before bashing the government, one can try to improve his/her efficiency of water-conservation. Ok, I agree that our country is in doldrums due to semi-literate goons running it, but the cure should start taking place from grass-root levels.
Rain-water harvesting should be made mandatory which has already been pointed out. In Kolkata treated sewage water and processed wet waste from the city are used in farm clusters around the city, thereby reducing the sewage water inside the city. Another inspiration is the Cuba city gardens.
 

d3p

PowerHouse
IMO, instead of blaming Govt. & their Research Data its the "aam-aadmi" supposed to be blamed.

Common Observations:

1). There are many areas [newly developed areas added into the city], who don't get BBMP water supply. Example : Electronic City, Whitefield [Major IT Hub of Bangalore with Huge STPI's & SEZ's]. How do they Survive ??

2). The other areas get water supply possible twice or thrice in a week. But people never learnt to utilize that supply too. We clean our Vehicles, Houses, Godawns & Temples blah blah unnecessarily on everyday basis. Is it really required to do so on everyday basis ?? For the such reason, we can't blame Govt.

3). Thirdly, how many of us are responsible enough to close the tap after using it ?? No matter its from our permanent flat or rented one, we always do posse such careless mentality.

4). Political Issues w.r.t Cauveri water sharing between Karnataka & TN. I guess this situation has very negligible impact on water shortage in bangalore.
 

amjath

Human Spambot
Re: Will Bangalore have to be evacuated by 2023

One of worst monsoon in tamil nadu last year. People living in towns and villages don't have water to drink. But in chennai which is a metro almost drinking metro water is supplied 12 hours, also it is wasted more. Why such a huge difference?? This is the problem for everything.

Connecting all rivers act still on the initial stage.

Dumping waste water from industries into rivers etc should also be reduced and purified before dumping.
 
Do not pass any building's blueprints if they don't have a place for water harvesting. Make it compulsory. Each day thousands of blueprints are passed.This should do it.
 

Anorion

Sith Lord
Staff member
Admin
stop borewells
stop cutting trees
all parts of the water cycle are getting messed up, drawing too much groundwater, and destroying too many trees that help with the catchment

remember not too long ago every house in the city had a well
 

quagmire

Allllright !
Apartments and hotels are the biggest underground water hoggers.. :twisted:
There should be a limit on how much water can be used per unit area or no. of people..
 

ganeshnokiae63

Hardcore Gamer
Rainwater harvesting - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
just googled
Instead of blaming Government
we should do Something
No offense
 

amjath

Human Spambot
In Tamil nadu it is implemented long back. Even in roads we have rain water drainage cum harvesting
 

Flash

Lost in speed
Rainwater harvesting - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
just googled
Instead of blaming Government
we should do Something
No offense
It's the job of the Govt. to educate its people. Only few who knew about the importance of RWH, may implement it by themselves..
But, for others? If Govt. mandates it with a stipulated date, then ALL will do at-least because of fear.

Am not trying to blame the Govt. here. But this must be conducted by Govt. itself, for a maximum exposure to all levels.
 
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