Waterbodies in Guwahati need to be restored through multi-stakeholder approach: Ashok Singhal

Aaranyak (www.aaranyak.org), hosted a day-long consultation workshop on ‘Rivers and Wetlands of Guwahati City
Waterbodies in Guwahati need to be restored through multi-stakeholder approach: Ashok Singhal

GUWAHATI: Aaranyak (www.aaranyak.org), hosted a day-long consultation workshop on 'Rivers and Wetlands of Guwahati City: Towards an integrated action plan for rejuvenation, conservation, and sustainable urban development', on Monday at the NEDFi House here.

The workshop was supported by the State Innovation and Transformation Ayog (SITA) and organized in collaboration with the Assam Science Technology and Environment Council (ASTEC). Minister of Housing and Urban Affairs and Irrigation of the Government of Assam, Ashok Singhal, who attended the workshop, solicited cooperation from all stakeholders for rejuvenating and conserving the dying as well as polluted rivers and waterbodies of Guwahati.

Singhal praised the initiative of home-grown environmental organization, Aaranyak and pointing out that the city's haphazard development over the years was the root cause of the problem because practically no stream had been left unpolluted and no wetland had been left un-encroached upon. He said the State Government was working towards rejuvenating all these wetlands and hoped for the support of all stakeholders. He assured that 50 per cent-60 per cent of the municipal waste will be processed through a project in the coming year.

The minister stated that Chief Minister Himanta Biswa Sarma was keen on preserving the wetlands, and that steps had been taken by the government to rejuvenate Deepor Beel and Silsako Beel in the city. "Hopefully, this workshop will result in sustainable conservation of waterbodies in and around the city and help restore them," the minister stated.

Guwahati, serves as a gateway not only to the north-eastern region, but also to Southeast Asia, as reflected in the Government of India's Act East policy. With a total area of more than 328 square kilometers and a population of more than ten lakhs, it is one of the fastest growing cities in the country. Because of its location on the banks of the mighty River Brahmaputra, one of the largest rivers in the world, and its landscape of hills, hillocks, valleys, and water bodies, it has a unique natural physiography.

Ramen Deka, vice-chairman of SITA, while addressing the gathering, said that human beings had destroyed nature and wildlife habitats and it was their responsibility now to restore and conserve them. Due to pollution and encroachment in the city, Bharalu River has been reduced to a mere polluted drain, and the problem of flash floods in the city has aggravated due to garbage-filled water bodies in many more wetlands.

"The Bharalu, Mora Bharalu, Basistha, Bahini, Pamohi, Khanajan, Kalmoni, and Bondajan are some of the prominent rivers and streams that drain the cityscape. The Deepar Beel, Borsola, Sarusola and Silsako are the main wetlands that act as storm water reservoirs of the city. Several of these water bodies are hydrologically connected to each other, meaning they carry and contribute water to one another. In the case of some wetlands, the inter-connecting channels have disappeared due to unpragmatic constructions and land development. Rapid urban growth and development, accompanied by significant rise in population, have dramatically transformed the city's landscape, environment, natural resources, demography, and society in the last 50 years. Unplanned growth of the city, both in horizontal and vertical directions have resulted in tremendous pressure on its natural resources and environment which is observed in widespread encroachment and human occupation of the fragile hill slopes, reserved forests, and decimation of water bodies. Increasing environmental degeneration of the city has led to the slow and steady death of many of its rivers, streams, wetlands, and natural storm water reservoirs. The urban water bodies of the city are facing grave threats from pollution, ecological degradation, and physical decimation," stated Dr Partha Jyoti Das, environmental scientist and Head of Aaranyak's Water, Climate and Hazard Division (WATCH), at the workshop.

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