By Sanjay Pinto
As a little boy, I remember carrying
plastic pots of water from tankers in Madras, as the city was called in the
eighties. The tag line was: 'Think Madras, think water scarcity'. For this very
reason, few families ever had relatives visiting them during the vacation!
Think Madras,think also floods. That was the cruel irony. India's fourth largest
metropolitan city faced a water crisis as well as severe inundation during the
monsoon. It took political will - that came from the present Tamilnadu Chief
Minister Jayalalithaa to change this dubious distinction. The catchphrase - rain
water harvesting turned Govt backed initiative turned peoples movement has today
ensured that this South Indian city is free from the chronic water scarcity of
the past.
Today, in peak summer,
Sita Laxminarayana, a senior citizen in Mylapore, South Chennai, has enough
water for her terrace garden; where she grows flowers for her pujas and
vegetables and spices for her kitchen. The
hospitable Aunty in the colony probably remembers her late husband humming an
improvised Jim Reeves number: "I Can Promise You A Rose Garden." The water is
sourced entirely from her well that even in this sweltering heat, is more than
half its capacity. A dry well was not an oxymoron
but a reality in the late nineties in Chennai! A city that was synonymous, even
notorious, for chronic water scarcity. A story of parched land and
throats and fights for that precious commodity, that had to be rationed through
water tankers, captured in a Tamil film ‘Thaneer, Thaneer’.
And when the monsoon failed Chennai in
2003, and storage in the 4 reservoirs at Red Hills, Poondi,
Sholavaram and Chembarambakkam plummeted, the effect of
Jayalalithaa’s far sighted rain water harvesting model came to the
city’s rescue.
Consider the pattern.
Chennai receives an average annual rainfall of 1300 millimetres. Most of this
rainfall is from the North East monsoon that is between October
& December, that occurs in heavy short spells of a few days or even a few
hours.How can I forget the floods on the 26th October,
2005, when the city received 220 millimetres of rain in 2 hours! As I drove my
Gypsy to work that day, the vehicle's high ground clearance came in handy as
water came up to my headlights! On an average, the city gets rain spread over
300 hours. Do the math. When 1300 millimetres of rainfall is harvested within
the city over an area of 174 sq. kms, a yield of 125 litres per person per day,
is possible, that will almost make residents self sufficient.At an
individual level, if the entire rainfall is harvested throughout the year on a
one ground plot or 2400 sq. ft. a yield of 700 litres of water per day is
possible. If there are 5 members in a household, that works out to 140 litres
per person per day; enough for bathing & washing clothes and utensils.
Dr.Shekhar Raghavan, Director of Rain Centre, an NGO that helped create
awareness attributes the success of the scheme to the combined strength of both.
"Usually it's a case of activists versus the government. Here it was both
joining hands."
Jayalalithaa’s double dose – of
enforcement and awareness was one of the factors that helped solve Chennai’s
chronic water scarcity. No new construction plan was sanctioned without a
rain water harvesting completion certificate. And for a change, the
government practised what it preached by installing rain water harvesting
structures in all government buildings and flyovers. Today, as
the Chennai Corporation is in the process of constructing storm water drains
across 560 kms, the Commissioner Dr.D.Karthikeyan claims that a rain water
harvesting provision is being made every 30 metres.
What a trickle down effect this had, quite literally, as
well! As the experiment became a peoples
movement, many big builders like the Ceebros Managing Director
Subba Reddy, who today, owns the eco friendly Rain Tree hotels as well, ensured
that the rain water harvesting plants in their projects were planned well and
effective; and not mere show pieces.
The transformation of the city has not been restricted to the 4 reservoirs that serve as a barometer of the water table but has also brought the 29 temple tanks alive; all over again. If you want tangible proof of the impact of rain water harvesting, just look at temple tanks. The Kapali temple tank used to be bone dry and I remember seeing boys playing cricket on it about 10 or 12 years ago. Today, it is full to the brim.
The proof of rain water harvesting lies
in the water table. In some areas, it has risen by about 10 to 15 metres. The
quality of ground water has also vastly improved. But not all homes installed proper structures. A study in 2005
revealed that at least 40% of buildings in both commercial and residential areas
had done mere window dressing just to escape punitive action. But with a
sizeable chunk of harvesting systems working, the results have been
encouraging. encouraging. Geo Hydrologists like
Saravanan vouch for a drastic reduction in the iron and saline content of water
after rainwater harvesting kicked in.
In politically volatile Tamilnadu,
regime changes are characterised by reversal of decisions. Rain Water Harvesting
has weathered many a political storm. So while the rest of India
suffers a double whammy in summer – water scarcity and power shortage, Chennai
is sitting pretty, at least on the water
front.
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