NEW DELHI: The
BJP’s election manifesto 2014 promises “inter-linking of rivers based
on feasibility” to pander to those regional parties which have already
exhausted the local water resources in their respective states. To drive
home the message, the BJP’s prime ministerial candidate says, “In
Gujarat, we have inter-linked 20 rivers and the agriculture growth is 10
per cent.” Its manifesto for the Lok Sabha elections in 2009 had
promised, “massive public sector investments in job-generating
infrastructure programmes, especially building of roads and highways,
and linking of rivers”.
In
NDA’s ‘Agenda for Development, Good Governance and Peace: Lok Sabha
2004’ it had promised, “The river-linking project will be launched
before August 15, 2004. An initial set of identified schemes will be
implemented with public participation by 2015. An effective
rehabilitation package for the project-affected persons shall be
finalized and implemented.” An earlier BJP-NDA ‘Agenda for a proud,
prosperous India: Lok Sabha 1999” had stated, “We will examine and take
time-bound steps to link Ganga-Cauvery rivers.”
In
September 1999, Prof SR Hashim, who was heading the Government’s
National Commission for Water Resource Development (NCWRD), submitted
the Integrated Water Resource Development Plan. This plan stated that
“the Himalayan river-linking data is not freely available but on the
basis of public information it appears that the Himalayan river-linking
component is not feasible for the period of review up to 2050″.
APJ
Abdul Kalam, the then president, in his Independence Day speech on
August 14, 2002, affirmed, “It is paradoxical to see floods in one part
of our country while some other parts face drought. This drought-flood
phenomenon is a recurring feature. The need of the hour is to have a
water mission which will enable availability of water to the fields,
villages, towns and industries throughout the year, even while
maintaining environmental purity. One major part of the water mission
would be networking of our rivers. Technological and project management
capabilities of our country can rise to the occasion and make this river
networking a reality with long term planning and proper investment.”
Had he sought existing wisdom within the government regarding networking
or river-linking of rivers, he would have learnt that after rigorous
examination the NCWRD had examined and rejected the idea. The Kalam
speech was either echoing the BJP’s manifesto of 1999 where the linking
of Ganga-Cauvery rivers had been mentioned, or, merely giving expression
to his own fancies without any scientific basis.
The
linking of rivers came into the picture in 1972 when the Ganga-Cauvery
link proposal mooted by KL Rao, former union irrigation minister, was
examined and dumped by the Union Ministry of Water Resources after the
Central Water Commission found it to be “grossly under-estimated”.
Prior to this, Captain Dastur had proposed a ‘garland of canals’
connecting the Himalayan rivers and the peninsular rivers; this was
found “technically unsound and economically prohibitive”. Despite these
rejections, some unknown lobbies kept pursuing it and planting it in the
minds of key functionaries of the Government of India.
Notably,
Mukesh Ambani, Chairman, Reliance Industries Limited, had also said
that “a convergence of civil engineering and agriculture can build a
trans-India water resources system by linking rivers.”
The
‘networking of rivers’ does not mean drawing some mega litres from one
river and pouring it into another, like one does with containers (or
even with canals). The ramifications are much wider because a river is
not only the water that flows or the channel which holds the flow. A
river is the dynamic face of the landscape. In the drama of history, the
eco system is not a stage — it is the cast.
Kalam
claimed that inter-linking of rivers will provide 300 billion cubic
metres (BCM) of additional water. However, the National Water
Development Agency (NWDA) provided a different figure of 174 BCM. It has
been estimated that canals involved in this project will cause the
submergence of 625, 000 hectares of land while reservoirs will lead to
the submergence of 1,050,000 hectares, leading to the displacement of
about 3.l4 million people. He has repeatedly observed that floods affect
eight major water basins, 40 million hectares and 260 million people.
However,
the ‘surplus’ water being diverted through inter-linking ranges between
2 and 2.5 per cent of peak flood discharge of surplus rivers like the
Ganga, Brahmaputra and Mahanadi. This is corroborated by the Central
Water Commission, NWDA, and authors of the National Commission for
Integrated Water Resources Development Plan.
The
Supreme Court judgment on the basis of an application moved by an
amicus curie who put the speech of Kalam before the court has put the
focus back on the Interlinking of Rivers (ILR). If implemented, it will
be the world’s biggest infrastructure project and will alter the
nation’s geography for all times to come. Indeed, does it make
ecological sense?
The
project proponents ask, ‘What is the cost of not taking up the
project?’ Their argument implies that if it is not taken up it would
mean an opportunity lost. However, they fail to answer several relevant
questions with regard to “costs” posed by the South Asia Network of
Dams, Rivers & People (SANDRP): What is the cost of neglecting
rainwater harvesting potential in the river basins of India, including
groundwater recharging? What is the cost of not assessing and realising
the benefits of watershed development in any of the river basins? What
is the cost of not maintaining and rejuvenating the existing local water
systems? What is the cost of not arresting siltation in existing
reservoirs which are filling up at much higher rates than the design
assumptions? What is the cost of not getting optimum results from the
existing irrigation infrastructure in India, the largest in the world?
What is the cost of maintaining drainage systems in agricultural areas?
What is the cost of not arresting the pollution of India’s freshwater
systems? What is the cost of not assessing the demand-side management
options in water and energy systems? What is the cost of not arresting
the transmission and distribution losses from our water and energy
supply systems, stopping thefts, and making the elite pay for the
services they use? What is the cost of not stopping the ‘hidden export’
of water with huge subsidies that India is indulging in, vis-à-vis sugar
and food grains export? What is the cost of not managing peak power
demands, not charging higher tariff during peak periods and not using
the existing hydro capacities for peak power supply? And, finally, what
is the cost of not allowing adequate freshwater flows in the dammed
rivers downstream?
The
proponents obstinately pursuing the ILR project, in their bid to outwit
the resistance to such projects, have a Plan A and Plan B. The State’s
proposals are part of Plan B. Plan A is the national interlinking of
rivers. The ILR programme is estimated at an aggregated cost of a
gigantic Rs 1,25,342 crore in terms of 2002-3 prices. It is aimed to
create additional storage facilities and transfer water from
water-surplus regions to more drought-prone areas through inter-basin
transfers. It is claimed that it will provide additional irrigation in
about 30 million hectares and net power generation capacity of about
20,000 to 25,000 MW.
While
the NWDA claims that Ganga, Kosi and Gandak rivers have surplus water,
the Bihar government has refuted the claim. Similar reservations have
been voiced by other states. Jairam Ramesh had submitted in Parliament
in 2005: “…in my view, there would be no greater calamity than massive
inter-linking of rivers.” However, after the Supreme Court’s verdict and
BJP’s support of ILR in its current manifesto, Ramesh and the Congress
leadership chose to maintain a collusive silence. The Congress-led
central government, the BJP-led Gujarat and MP government, and the
Samajwadi Party-led UP government have signed MoUs to undertake the ILR
project. Even the JD(U)-led Bihar government is keen to undertake ILR
projects. States like Kerala, Punjab, West Bengal and Maharashtra had
earlier rejected the ILR project of Plan A; but they have got trapped by
the state-specific Plan B. The NWDA has proposed 30 major river link
canals involving 37 rivers throughout the country to transfer water from
so-called surplus basins to water-deficit basins as part of the
peninsular and Himalayan components of the ILR project.
Notably,
Bangladesh, as a downstream country, will be directly affected. The
apex court judgment acknowledges that the construction of storage
reservoirs on the principal tributaries of the Ganga and Brahmaputra
rivers in India, Bhutan and Nepal makes this an international issue.
Bangladesh is also an affected party, but it does not find mention in
the judgment.
Ironically,
Justice Swatanter Kumar, who authored the judgment to undertake the
world’s most ecologically disastrous project, is currently the chairman
of the National Green Tribunal, whose mandate is to prevent
environmental damage.
A
study conducted by the National Council for Applied Economic Research
(NCAER) cites A Vaidyanathan’s 2001 paper titled ‘Irrigation Subsidies’
and the ‘Report of the Committee on Pricing of Irrigation Water’ (1992)
drafted for the Planning Commission under his chairmanship. Ironically,
his views debunking the myth of ‘surplus’ rivers are deliberately
ignored. Indeed, the judgment also did not take note that as per NCAER
the new aggregated cost is Rs 1,25,343 crore or 22.4 per cent lower than
the earlier aggregate estimate of Rs 5,60,000 crore, at 2002-03 prices.
In
the past, the court has rightly and consistently held that large
infrastructure projects invariably raise technical and policy issues
which the courts are not equipped to handle. In view of the reasons
cited above and especially an evolving international law on
transboundary rivers, here is a clear case for the apex court to review
its order on “networking of rivers.”
In
any case, the critical issue is how to solve India’s water problem. As
per the Planning Commission’s Tenth Plan document, there are 383 ongoing
major and medium projects awaiting completion, 111 of which are pending
for more than 26 years. All these projects can be completed within five
to eight years yielding an additional potential of about 14 million
hectares at a cost of Rs 100,000 crore, as estimated by the Tenth Plan
task force.
The
second component listed in the Plan is the development of minor
irrigation, mostly in the eastern and northeastern regions. The total
potential assessed is 24.5 million hectares with a total investment of
Rs 54,000 crore of which the government is expected to provide only Rs
13,500 crore, the balance coming from beneficiary farmers and
institutional loans. The cost per hectare is only Rs 20,000 and
gestation period almost nil, against a cost of Rs 100,000 and a 12-year
gestation period for major and medium projects.
The
third, equally beneficial scheme mentioned in the Plan is the
groundwater recharge master plan prepared by the Central Ground Water
Board, needing Rs 24,500 crore to trap 36 billion cubic metres of water
annually. These measures are clearly better than the networking of
rivers. In this context, the judgment seems akin to what the science
journal, New Scientist, referred to as “replumbing the planet.”
Rivers
shape the terrain and lives of people by its waters which are always in
a dynamic state. Breaking this dynamic would unleash forces of
uncontrolled change and invite the ‘law of unintended consequences’.
Let’s remember the terrible Aral Sea disasters in which two Siberian
rivers were diverted.
Certainly, if water scarcity is the perennial question, aren’t there better answers available?
The writer is a public policy analyst and Convener, Toxics Watch Alliance, New Delhi.
Comments
(1 comment)
Dr Priyambada Hejmadi, noted zoologist, once told me that this river linking project would cause absolute damage to India’s reverine ecology. Once realised, some of the special variety pisces like the the Gangetic Hilsa and the famous Brahmaputra catfish may go extinct in a few year.
http://www.thecitizen.in/rewriting-geography-bjp-style/