English, asked by sanj123ay2007, 8 months ago


A. Article
Long and hot summers along with erratic monsoons every year threaten water scarcity in many states
The best solution to this problem is harvesting and storing the rain water. Taking ideas from the notes
given below, together with your own ideas, write an article for your school magazine on Rain water
Harvesting-Today's need. You are Rohit / Ritika. Advantages (Improvement in quality of ground water,
raising of water level, ideal situation to water problem, reduction of soil erosion)​

Answers

Answered by alokdasbabrilcourt
4

Answer:

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Explanation:

After the hottest summer in recorded history, India endured a delayed monsoon and widespread floods. Assam in the North East was one of the earliest states to be ravaged by floods, followed by Maharashtra and Kerala. By mid-August, states in central India began to flood.

Extreme rain events over central India tripled between 1950 and 2015, according to a 2017 study led by researchers at the Indian Institute of Tropical Meteorology, Pune, affecting about 825 million people, leaving 17 million homeless and killing about 69,000.The probability of similar flooding in the years to come is high, driven by a global rise in temperatures – 1 degree Celsius since systematic record-keeping began in 1850 – according to an October 2018 report by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, the United Nations body formed to assess science on climate change.The total rainfall has not changed much but extreme rainfall has increased and this will lead to more floods,” said J Srinivasan, founder chairman and distinguished professor at the Divecha Centre for Climate Change under the Indian Institute of Science, Bengaluru.

Even as India is likely to end with an excess of 1% rainfall in 2019, large parts of the country face a rainfall deficit.India’s per capita availability of water is 1,544 cubic metres, water resources minister Gajendra Singh Shekhawat told parliament’s upper house, the Rajya Sabha, in July, compared to 1,816 cubic metres in 2001. The average for lower-middle-income countries, the group that India is a part of, based on its per capita income, is 3,013 cubic metres. For high-income countries, this number is 8,822 cubic metres.

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