Social Sciences, asked by shankarmurthybm0321, 9 months ago

is jalshakti ministry and Jal Jeevan Mission will reduce the water scarcity in India​

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Answered by SamikBiswa1911
2

Answer:

In 1951, per-capita water availability in India was just over 5,000 cu m per year. In 2011, it was 1,545 cu m. The figure has almost certainly come down since. Should it drop below 1,000 cu m per year, India will formally become a water-scarce country for the first time in its 5,000-year history. If water availability is a problem, inequality in access is even more so.

India has 180 million rural households. About 33 million have access to piped water; a little over 145 million don’t. The Jal Jeevan Mission (JJM), announced by Prime Minister Narendra Modi, aims to provide tap water to all of these households by 2024. This means 4.5 times more houses have to be linked to piped water in the coming five years than has been done in the past 72 years.

The mission constitutes one of GoI’s biggest infrastructure outlays. Rs 3,50,000 crore (roughly $50 billion) will be spent on the project. That comes to Rs 70,000 crore a year on cement, pipes, pumps, equipment, construction, wages, conservation, revival of water bodies, skill building, institution creation — everything. Spent wisely, this will be a boon not just to rural society, health and equity, but also to the rural economy.

Yet, JJM is not merely about construction and contracts. It flows from a larger philosophy and an integrated approach to water-related issues that caused the prime minister to merge several departments and create the Ministry of Jal Shakti by the merging of the ministry of water resources, river development and Ganga rejuvenation and the ministry of drinking water and sanitation. In part, Modi is scaling up his lessons from Gujarat. In a wider sense, he is seeking to inculcate a responsible and responsive relationship with water. At meetings, he frequently uses two phrases: the ‘value of water’, and the ‘water footprint’ of human and economic activity.

The story of Modi’s intense engagement with water as a policy issue goes back to the early summer of 2002, when Gujarat began a familiar cycle of summertime shortages.

North Gujarat, Saurashtra and Kutch had a chronic water scarcity. On an average, dams and reservoirs there were filled to 24-25% of capacity. Exasperated by the endless plans for water trains and tankers, Modi told Gujarat’s civil servants, “I don’t want to just manage the situation, I want a solution.”

Within six years, he had his results. From 2008, the water table in Gujarat has actually been rising. 80% of households in the state have access to piped water. A network of canals takes the floodwaters of south Gujarat to Saurashtra and other water-scarce regions to irrigate farmland, recharge groundwater and fill dams and reservoirs. 2019 saw abundant rains. Those dams and reservoirs — once filled to no more than a quarter of capacity — have been completely filled twice. A pioneering state water grid covers three-fourths of Gujarat — 14,000 of 18,500 villages.

Enlightened water policy needs infrastructure. But more than that, it requires institutions with local and village ownership. Both JJM and the Jal Shakti Abhiyan — a preparatory campaign to empower local communities, in cooperation with state and GoI agencies, and work towards water conservation in 256 water-stressed districts — are designed for village-level ownership.

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