BUILDING WATER SECURITY in a Rapidly Drying India

BUILDING WATER SECURITY in a Rapidly Drying India

 

  PRELIMS       GS-I       GS-II       GS-III       ESSAY 

📌  WHY IN THE NEWS

  The Hindu editorial flags India’s deepening water insecurity — falling rainfall reliability, rising heat, groundwater over-extraction, urbanisation and surging demand.

  It calls for integrated water resource management and climate-resilient policy action, at a time when reservoir levels are down and hydrological extremes are intensifying.

India’s Water Story — In Numbers

18%

of world population

4%

of global freshwater

~4000 BCM

annual rainfall received

#1

largest groundwater extractor globally

  KEY DEFINITIONS TO MASTER

These are the highest-yield Prelims one-liners from this topic — expect direct or statement-based questions.

Water Security (UN Definition)

 

  The capacity of a population to safeguard sustainable access to adequate quantities of acceptable-quality water for livelihoods, human well-being, economic development and ecosystem preservation.

The Three Thresholds — Learn by Heart

Category

Per Capita Water Availability

Nature of Shortage

Water Stress

Below 1700 m³ / person / year

Demand starts exceeding available freshwater

Water Scarcity

Below 1000 m³ / person / year

Severe shortage affecting daily needs

Absolute Scarcity

Below 500 m³ / person / year

Critical, life-threatening shortage

Groundwater & Aquifer

   Groundwater: water stored beneath the Earth’s surface in soil and rock formations (aquifers). India is the largest extractor of groundwater in the world.

   Aquifer: an underground geological formation capable of storing and transmitting groundwater.

  IMPORTANT FACTS FOR UPSC

Water Use Pattern in India

Sector

Approximate Share of Freshwater Use

Agriculture

80% – 85%  (the biggest consumer)

Domestic

7% – 8%

Industry

5% – 7%

Groundwater Dependence

India ≈ 25% of Global Groundwater Extraction

  Major groundwater-dependent states: Punjab, Haryana, Rajasthan, Uttar Pradesh, Gujarat and Tamil Nadu.

Rainfall Characteristics

India receives around 75–80% of its annual rainfall during the Southwest Monsoon — making the country highly dependent on a short, seasonal rainy window

  MAJOR CAUSES OF THE WATER CRISIS

1. Climate Change

Rising heatwaves, erratic rainfall, cloudbursts and longer dry spells → reduced groundwater recharge and frequent droughts.

2. Over-Extraction of Groundwater

Free electricity + water-intensive crops → rapid, unchecked groundwater depletion.

3. Water-Intensive Cropping

Paddy and sugarcane continue to be grown even in water-deficit regions.

4. Urbanisation

Concrete surfaces reduce infiltration, causing flooding and lower groundwater recharge.

5. Pollution

Industrial waste, untreated sewage and agrochemicals render large volumes of freshwater unusable.

6. Population Growth

Rising demand for drinking water, food production and industrial use.

7. Inefficient Irrigation

Traditional flood irrigation wastes nearly 40–60% of water used.

8. Poor Water Governance

Fragmented institutions, weak enforcement, poor maintenance, and lack of pricing reforms.

  CONSEQUENCES OF WATER INSECURITY

Domain

Key Impact

Agriculture

Lower crop productivity → food insecurity

Economy

Falling industrial production, energy generation & GDP growth

Health

Unsafe water spreads cholera, diarrhoea, typhoid

Environment

Dry rivers, wetland loss, biodiversity decline

Social

Farmer distress, rural migration, water conflicts

National Security

Rising risk of conflict between states, cities & sectors over sharing

  GOVERNMENT INITIATIVES

Initiative

Core Focus

Jal Shakti Ministry (2019)

Integrates water governance under one ministry

Jal Jeevan Mission

Functional tap water connection to every rural household

Atal Bhujal Yojana

Community-led groundwater management

PM Krishi Sinchayee Yojana (PMKSY)

“Per Drop More Crop” — drip & sprinkler irrigation

Namami Gange Programme

River cleaning and rejuvenation

National Water Mission

Water conservation and efficiency

Important Committees & Reports

   NITI Aayog Composite Water Management Index: Flags groundwater depletion across several Indian cities; shows better governance improves water security.

   Central Ground Water Board (CGWB): Monitors groundwater levels nationally.

   Central Water Commission (CWC): Manages surface water resources.

   UN-Water: Publishes global water security reports.

  WAY FORWARD — MAINS ANSWER TOOLKIT

Use this as a ready-made framework for GS-III / Essay answers on water resource management.

Strategy

Key Actions

Improve Water Governance

Basin-level planning; Integrated Water Resource Management (IWRM)

Efficient Irrigation

Drip irrigation, sprinklers, precision agriculture

Crop Diversification

Shift from paddy & sugarcane towards millets, pulses, oilseeds

Rainwater Harvesting

Mandatory in urban buildings, industries and institutions

Groundwater Recharge

Check dams, percolation tanks, wetland restoration

Wastewater Recycling

Reuse treated water for industry, agriculture, landscaping

Urban Planning

Blue-green infrastructure, sponge cities, lake restoration

Community Participation

Water budgeting, Panchayat-level management, local audits

Global Models Worth Quoting

🇮🇱 Israel

  World leader in drip irrigation

  Recycles a large share of wastewater for agriculture

  Extensive desalination infrastructure

 

🇸🇬 Singapore

  Rainwater harvesting integrated into urban design

  NEWater — advanced wastewater recycling

  Desalination and smart water management systems

  PRELIMS QUICK-REVISION CAPSULE

Memorise Before the Exam

  Water Stress threshold = 1700 m³ / person / year

  Water Scarcity = 1000 m³ / person / year

  Absolute Scarcity = 500 m³ / person / year

  Agriculture uses ~80–85% of India’s freshwater

  India: 18% of world population, only 4% of freshwater resources

  India is the world’s largest extractor of groundwater (~25% of global total)

  Southwest Monsoon provides ~75–80% of India’s annual rainfall

  PRELIMS PRACTICE QUESTIONS

Q1. Consider the following statements regarding water security in India:

1. India possesses nearly 18% of the world’s population but only around 4% of global freshwater resources.

2. Agriculture accounts for the largest share of freshwater use in India.

3. Water stress begins when annual per capita water availability falls below 1700 cubic metres.

Which of the statements given above is/are correct?   (a) 1 and 2 only   (b) 2 and 3 only   (c) 1 and 3 only   (d) 1, 2 and 3

  Answer: (d) 1, 2 and 3

Q2. Which of the following measures can improve groundwater sustainability?

1. Rainwater harvesting

2. Drip irrigation

3. Wetland restoration

4. Excessive pumping from tube wells

Select the correct answer:   (a) 1 and 2 only   (b) 1, 2 and 3 only   (c) 2, 3 and 4 only   (d) 1, 3 and 4 only

  Answer: (b) 1, 2 and 3 only

  MAINS PRACTICE QUESTION

GS-III  ·  250 Words

  “Water security is no longer only an environmental concern but a critical issue of economic growth, social justice, and national resilience.” Discuss the major challenges to achieving water security in India and suggest a comprehensive strategy for sustainable water resource management in the context of climate change.

Suggested Structure

   Introduction: Define water security (UN definition) and link it to economy, health, and security.

   Body — Challenges: Climate change, over-extraction, cropping pattern, urbanisation, pollution, governance gaps (Section 3).

   Body — Strategy: IWRM, efficient irrigation, crop diversification, recharge & recycling, global examples (Section 6).

   Conclusion: Tie back to SDG-6 and cooperative federalism in water governance.

 

 

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