india

Updated: Jun 28, 2019 08:58 IST

Tamil Nadu has the highest number of blocks in the over-exploited category – 358 -- due to groundwater extraction, according to data released by Rattan Lal Kataria, minister of state for Jal Shakti, in the Lok Sabha on Thursday. About 52% wells being monitored in the country are recording declining groundwater levels, he said.

Out of 6,584 blocks assessed in the country, 1,034 are in the over-exploited category, 253 in the critical category, 681 in the semi-critical category, 96 in the saline category, and 4,520 in the safe category. Kataria was answering a question seeking details of the districts or blocks identified and marked as dark zones by the Central Ground Water Board (CGWB), particularly in Aurangabad district of Maharashtra.

“Groundwater levels in various parts of the country are declining because of continuous withdrawal due to reasons such as increased demand for fresh water for various uses, vagaries of rainfall, increased population, industrialization and urbanization…” Kataria said.

The CGWB carries out groundwater monitoring four times a year across the country. To assess groundwater-level trends on a long-term basis, pre-monsoon groundwater data for 2018 has been compared with the decadal average (2008 to 2017).

“Analysis of the data indicates decline in groundwater level in about 52% of the wells being monitored,” Kataria said.

In Maharashtra, out of a total of 353 talukas or blocks, nine have been categorized as over-exploited. But Tamil Nadu has the highest number of talukas in the over-exploited category (358), followed by Rajasthan (164), Uttar Pradesh (113)and Punjab (105).

However, Tamil Nadu has a very large number of blocks that have been assessed, while in the rest of the states, fewer blocks have been assessed but a relatively large number has been f found to be in the over-exploited category. In reply to another question on groundwater levels, Kataria said out of 14,243 wells analysed in the country, 52% or 7,412 are showing a declining trend while 6,786 are showing a rising trend. The categorization of blocks was conducted in 2013 but comparative data is being shared only now, while the trend analysis was done by CGWB in 2018. The comparative data is relevant because Tamil Nadu is experiencing one of its worst water crises in years. The state repealed the Tamil Nadu Groundwater (Development and Management) Act, 2003 -- meant to ration and regulate groundwater extraction -- in 2013 on protests from farmers. It was never replaced by another law.

“It was not the right move. Groundwater extraction is extremely high in rural areas. The crops we grow are extremely water-intensive like sugarcane and paddy. Repealing the act may have aggravated the problem,” said retired IAS officer Santha Sheela Nair, the municipal administration and water supply (MAWS) secretary in 2003 who was instrumental in making rainwater harvesting mandatory in Tamil Nadu.