About 70 percent of India’s population depends on agriculture, 75 percent of water required for the fields comes from the southwest monsoon. Water storage in reservoirs appears insufficient for irrigation and drinking supplies and boreholes down to the groundwater are commonplace
The increasing population, increase in irrigation requirements, the
need for drinking water and deficient monsoon rains have obvious
consequences. Boreholes are drawn on for greater supply and the
groundwater level consequently drops even further
At least 21 cities in India,
including capital New Delhi, Bengaluru, Chennai and Hyderabad, will run
out of groundwater by 2020, affecting around 100 million people
About 40 percent of India's population will have no access to drinking water by 2030, according to a report by the National Institution for Transforming India (NITI Aayog)India's principal planning organisation
One of the worrying predictions of climate change
has been a weakening monsoon season in South Asia with rainfall in the region below average for the last 5 years,with 2015 being
the worst at 86 percent.
Millions of people have been forced to rely on water from tank trucks in the southern Tamil Nadu, which had a 62 percent shortfall in monsoon rains in 2018
Deficient rainfall during the 2017 northeast monsoon and a failed monsoon in 2018 have resulted in the depletion of groundwater levels and the near drying-up of major water bodies. Four major lakes around Chennai - Chembarambakkam, Poondi, Red Hills and Cholavaram - are almost dry.
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