India’s rivers and aquifers are drying. ~70% of our food is produced from unsustainable groundwater irrigation, and groundwater is rapidly disappearing. This has serious implications for continued economic growth. On one hand, there is widespread public and political concern about India’s water. Recent campaigns by major spiritual leaders like Isha Foundation’s Rally for Rivers and the Art of Living’s River Rejuvenation campaigns have attracted massive support. There is clearly an economic argument for addressing India’s water crisis – it has been estimated that the Cauvery riots of 2016 resulted in a loss of Rs. 25,000 crores and the Chennai floods a loss of Rs 15,000 crores. Yet, on the other hand, the trajectory of the country toward a doomed water future seems to be accelerating, not slowing down.
Author
Veena Srinivasan
Veena Srinivasan
Veena (B.Tech. '95 EnggPhy H10) is a Fellow at the Ashoka Trust for Research in Ecology and the Environment (ATREE), Bangalore. Her research interests include inter-sectoral water allocation, impacts of multiple stressors on water resources, and sustainable water management, policy and practice. She leads several research projects that combine field hydrology, low-cost sensing, citizen science and simulation modelling to find solutions to critical water problems. Veena received her PhD from Stanford University’s Emmet Interdisciplinary Program in Environment and Resources. She holds a Masters in Energy and Environmental Studies from Boston University.