India must recognise water crisis early: NITI Aayog

India must recognise water crisis early: NITI Aayog

New Delhi, July 27: Terming Yamuna a “dead river”, NITI Aayog Vice Chairman Rajiv Kumar on Friday said the “enormity of the water crisis” was not being recognized in India, and that 10 large cities would completely go dry by 2030. “Unfortunately, NITI Aayog has to point out that 600 million people live in water-stressed areas and by 2030, our demand for water may double,” Kumar said at Dr A.P.J. Abdul Kalam Memorial youth conclave on ‘Creating Livable Planet Earth’. The government’s think tank last month came out with a report on the country’s water crisis. It was a “supreme irony” that the country was facing the crisis despite receiving plentiful rains, he remarked.

“Some 30 years ago, water was transported to Gujarat by trains as 700-ft deep wells in that state were filled with arsenic. These situations can be reversed, but the work has to start now...no more delays,” he said. In order to curtail sewage getting dumped in the Yamuna, Kumar said the NITI Aayog had come up with a bio-digester toilet system which was first discovered in Antarctica. If the new initiative is implemented, the country would not require any more sewage transport systems, he added. Remembering Abdul Kalam, who said that every citizen of the country should have a ‘right to water’, he said “mere rights will not make that happen...entitlements have to come with responsibility”. (IANS)

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