DROUGHT IN MAHARASHTRA
Providing clean water to a swelling
population is expected to be one of the biggest challenges for the Indian
state in the coming years, a task that won’t be made any easier by falling
ground water levels and water pollution. However, in a state like Maharashtra
which is already grappling with one of its worst water shortages in year, is
too much water being cornered by private groups at the cost of the
marginalised?In a scathing editorial in the Hindu, Magsaysay award winner and journalist P Sainath argues
that it isn’t purely rising demand, but a flawed water allocation policy by the
Maharashtra government that is to be blamed for the shortage of water in the
state.
The editorial points to the rise of water
parks in the state, golf courses that have sparked conflict with farmers, water
meant for industrial projects being diverted for private developers of real
estate projects, and the encouragement for sugar and rose crops despite the
fact they were consuming more than a rational share of water resources.
Pointing out the power of the sugar crop
lobby in the state, one reportedly patronised by Agriculture minister and NCP
Chief Sharad Pawar, Sainath says:Even as foodcrop declines, fully
two-thirds of Maharashtra’s sugarcane is grown in drought-prone or water scarce
areas. At least one Collector had called for sugarcane crushing in his district
to be suspended during this crisis. The sugar factories there together use up
to 90 lakh litres a day. Given the power the sugar barons wield, the Collector
is more likely to be suspended than the crushing.
Sainath’s blunt criticism of the the
Maharashtra government comes even as parts of the state grapple with severe
drought with farmers in some
parts being forced to take extreme measures to deal with the
water shortage.
Prof. John Kurakar
No comments:
Post a Comment