Examine the factors responsible for depleting groundwater in India. What are the steps taken by the government to mitigate such depletion of groundwater?

Q. Examine the factors responsible for depleting groundwater in India. What are the steps taken by the government to mitigate such depletion of groundwater?

Introduction:
Groundwater—meeting ~60% of irrigation and ~85% of drinking water needs—faces rapid depletion in India due to overuse and weak regulation.


Factors Responsible for Groundwater Depletion

1. Over-extraction for Agriculture

  • Water-intensive crops (paddy, sugarcane) in unsuitable regions (Punjab, Haryana)
  • Free/cheap electricity → excessive pumping

2. Inefficient Irrigation Practices

  • Flood irrigation → low water-use efficiency
  • Limited adoption of micro-irrigation

3. Urbanisation & Industrial Demand

  • Rapid city growth → borewell dependence
  • Industrial overuse without recharge

4. Declining Recharge

  • Concretisation reduces infiltration
  • Wetland loss, encroachment of water bodies

5. Climate Variability

  • Erratic monsoons, droughts
  • Reduced natural recharge cycles

6. Policy & Institutional Gaps

  • Weak regulation of groundwater (open-access resource)
  • Poor data, monitoring

Impacts

  • Falling water table (critical blocks rising)
  • Water quality issues (fluoride, arsenic)
  • Agricultural distress, food security risks

Government Steps to Mitigate Groundwater Depletion

1. Regulatory & Institutional Measures

  • Aquifer mapping (NAQUIM) by Central Ground Water Board
  • Groundwater guidelines, NOC for extraction

2. Atal Bhujal Yojana (ABHY)

  • Community-led groundwater management
  • Focus on water-stressed states

3. Jal Shakti Abhiyan

  • Water conservation, rainwater harvesting
  • “Catch the rain” campaign

4. Promotion of Micro-Irrigation

  • PMKSY (Per Drop More Crop)
  • Drip & sprinkler subsidies

5. Crop Diversification

  • Shift from paddy to millets, pulses
  • MSP support for less water-intensive crops

6. Recharge & Conservation Structures

  • Check dams, percolation tanks
  • Revival of traditional water bodies

7. Urban Measures

  • Mandatory rainwater harvesting in cities
  • Wastewater reuse policies

8. Policy Framework

  • Model Groundwater Bill (community-based approach)
  • Role of NITI Aayog in water management reforms

Challenges

  • Implementation gaps at state/local level
  • Behavioural resistance (farmers’ crop choices)
  • Coordination issues across agencies

Way Forward

  • Shift to demand-side management
  • Water pricing reforms (rational electricity pricing)
  • Strengthen local institutions (Panchayats, Water User Associations)
  • Use technology (GIS, IoT-based monitoring)

Conclusion:
Sustainable groundwater management requires a shift from exploitation to conservation through integrated policy, community participation, and efficient water use practices.

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