Groundwater Management Governance in India

Authors

  • Ms. Falgunni Sachdev
  • Dr. Tushar Panigrahi

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.58213/vidhyayana.v8i5.693

Keywords:

Groundwater Management, Groundwater Management Governance, Groundwater Legislation, Groundwater in India

Abstract

Water scarcity problem in India has become grave and the present per capita availability of water is 1486 cubic meters in the year 2021 (Acharya, 2021). Per capita availability of water below 1700 cubic meters is considered as water stressed and if this number falls to 1100 cubic meters the country may be declared as water scarce and water insecure. One of the most important aspects of achieving water security is to work on the conservation and recharge of groundwater (Mishra et.al., 2021). State plays a pivotal role in ensuring efficient groundwater governance and implementation of relevant laws and policies. This conceptual paper is an effort in capturing a snapshot of the present government machinery in India to manage its groundwater resources. Various government websites, policy papers, bill documents and reports were reviewed to understand the hierarchical structure of groundwater governance in the country. Impact of each of their work on others was studied to understand how implementation and its pace would be affected. The laws, ministry, departments and ongoing policies that constitute the government machinery for groundwater management have been presented at the end. The insights shared herein may be of help to anyone looking to work as a stakeholder in groundwater management. Researchers looking to contribute to groundwater scenario of the country may find easy access to the governance structure. Anyone studying policy implications of national level policies may also find it helpful to understand how information and power flows in the system to ensure smooth implementation. Literature review carried out to look for a similar snapshot of present groundwater governance did not bring to surface any work capturing such a comprehensive discussion as covered in this paper.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

References

Acharya, D. (2021). Water and Public Policy in India: Politics, Rights, and Governance. Taylor & Francis.

Aayog, N. I. T. I. (2019). Composite water management index. Government of India, New Delhi http://social. niti. gov. in/uploads/sample/water_index_report2. pdf. Accessed, 28, 21.

Asthana, V. (2009). Water policy processes in India: discourses of power and resistance (Vol. 18). Routledge.

Balachandran, A., & Scientist, D. (2009). Central Ground Water Board. Govt. of India, Ministry of water resources, South eastern coastal region, Chennai District ground water brochure technical report series, Thoothukudi district, Tamil Nadu.

Balachandran, S. (2020). Role of Jal Shakti Ministry. Issue 2 Int'l JL Mgmt. & Human., 3, 122.

Chaudhary, V., Jacks, G., & Gustafsson, J. E. (2002). An analysis of groundwater vulnerability and water policy reform in India. Environmental Management and Health, 13(2), 175-193.

Chinchmalatpure, A. R., Gorain, B., Kumar, S., Camus, D. D., & Vibhute, S. D. (2019). Groundwater pollution through different contaminants: Indian scenario. Research developments in saline agriculture, 423-459.

Cullet, P., & Gupta, J. (2009). India: evolution of water law and policy. The evolution of the law and politics of water, 157-173.

Cullet, P., Bhullar, L., & Koonan, S. (2017). Regulating the interactions between climate change and groundwater: lessons from India. Water International, 42(6), 646-662.

Cullet, P. (2018). Model Groundwater (Sustainable Management) Bill, 2017: A new paradigm for groundwater regulation. Indian Law Review, 2(3), 263-276.

Cullet, P. (2021). Groundwater Management—Towards a Legal Framework Ensuring Equity and Protection. Groundwater Law and Management in India: From an Elitist to an Egalitarian Paradigm, 337-347.

Harshit. (2022). Groundwater Law and Management in India: Towards an Equitable Framework. Issue 4 Int'l JL Mgmt. & Human., 5, 1159.

Khalil, A., 2020. Disclosable Restructuring Paper - Atal Bhujal Yojana (Abhy)-National Groundwater Management Improvement - P158119, World Bank Group. United States of America. Retrieved from https://policycommons.net/artifacts/1259592/disclosable-restructuring-paper/1829868/ on 20 Apr 2023. CID: 20.500.12592/3nm397.

Koundouri, P. (2004). Current issues in the economics of groundwater resource management. Journal of Economic Surveys, 18(5), 703-740.

Lnu, S., 2022. Disclosable Version of the ISR - Atal Bhujal Yojana (Abhy)-National Groundwater Management Improvement - P158119 - Sequence No : 08 (English), World Bank Group. United States of America. Retrieved from https://policycommons.net/artifacts/2639633/disclosable-version-of-the-isr-atal-bhujal-yojana-abhy-national-groundwater-management-improvement-p158119-sequence-no/3662421/ on 20 Apr 2023. CID: 20.500.12592/2357sq.

Mishra, B. K., Kumar, P., Saraswat, C., Chakraborty, S., & Gautam, A. (2021). Water security in a changing environment: Concept, challenges and solutions. Water, 13(4), 490.

Rana, M., & Guleria, V. (2018). Water scarcity in India: a threat to sustainable management of water. ESSENCE Int J Env Rehab Conserv, 9(1), 35-44.

Richard-Ferroudji, A., Raghunath, T. P., & Venkatasubramanian, G. (2018). Managed aquifer recharge in India: Consensual policy but controversial implementation. Water Alternatives, 11(3), 749-769.

Romani, S. (2006). Central Groundwater Authority-Past Experience and Future Strategies for Regulating the Development and Utilization of Groundwater in India. Groundwater Research and Management: Integrating Science into Management Decisions, 87.

Saha, D., & Ray, R. K. (2019). Groundwater resources of India: potential, challenges and management. Groundwater Development and Management: Issues and Challenges in South Asia, 19-42.

Additional Files

Published

30-04-2023

How to Cite

Ms. Falgunni Sachdev, & Dr. Tushar Panigrahi. (2023). Groundwater Management Governance in India. Vidhyayana - An International Multidisciplinary Peer-Reviewed E-Journal - ISSN 2454-8596, 8(si5), 188–206. https://doi.org/10.58213/vidhyayana.v8i5.693