In one of the driest regions of the country, water-hungry cash crops deplete dams while citizens are left high and dry
April 19, 2016:
In a scene straight out of a dystopian science fiction
novel, a train carrying half a million litres of water arrived in the
Indian city of Latur this week, greeted by people carrying garlands and
bouquets. The ‘water express’ is part of a series of measures designed
to provide emergency relief to the drought-hit Marathwada region of
Maharashtra state. Dams that supply water to several districts in the
area have run completely dry in recent weeks, prompting the complete
shut down of public water supply, closure of hospitals, commandeering of
borewells and even water-related deaths.
The
district collector denies that the current situation constitutes a
crisis, but it hasn’t prevented the administration from enforcing
Section 144 of the Criminal Procedure Code in the area, preventing the
assembly of more than five people near water distribution points.
However,
the drought in Marathwada is hardly a surprise. After a less than
stellar monsoon last year, it has been clear for months that water
supply in the three major dams that supply Latur would not last until
the next spell of showers. With climate change increasing the frequency
of erratic weather patterns, the state of Maharashtra has lurched
blindly from one disaster to another. According to a 2008 World Bank
report, a drought in 2003 and a flood in 2005 together absorbed more of
the state’s budget than the entire planned expenditure on irrigation,
agriculture and rural development over the previous six years.
Research
indicates that the occurrence of such extreme events is expected to
rise and yet the current situation in Latur is clear evidence that
monetary imperatives, rather than environmental concerns are driving the
state’s water usage policy. Despite 73 per cent of its land area being
classified as semi-arid, Maharashtra is among the largest producers in
the country of two water intensive cash crops – sugarcane and cotton. By
the government’s own statistics, 2,450 litres of water is required to
produce 1 kg of sugar in the state against 990 litres in Uttar Pradesh.
Cotton has an even higher cost - 1kg consumes on average 22,500 litres
of water, according to the Water Footprint Network.
Sugarcane
in particular is closely tied to politics in Maharashtra. Some of the
most prominent leaders in the state, including former Chief Ministers
Vilasrao Deshmukh and Ashok Chavan, deputy CMs Ajit Pawar and Vijaysingh
Patil and a number of other ministers, MLAs and MPs all either own or
indirectly control sugar mills and co-operatives. This not only makes it
impossible to reduce the cultivation of this water-hungry crop, but
allows for unchecked expansion through state sponsored procurement
programs and aid.
The chronically loss-making sugar
industry received an interest-free loan package of ₹6000 crore last year
– the latest in a long line of similar bailouts offered by governments
cutting across party lines.
The Centre is currently
looking to increase the amount of ethanol blended in petrol to 10%. This
has led the food department to order the major sugar-producing states,
including Maharashtra, to nearly double their current production of
ethanol, which is produced from sugarcane. The panel which originally
proposed the idea was headed by Sharad Pawar, another politician with
close ties to the sugar lobby who has been accused of involvement in
multiple scams relating to the sugar industry.
With
politicians fanning powerful headwinds in the direction of the sugar
industry, plummeting water tables have taken the back seat as the six
major sugar producing districts of Maharashtra added 38 new sugar mills
between 2009-10 and 2014-15, with production going from 710 lakh metric
tonnes to 1051 lakh metric tonnes. Cotton production has also grown
significantly – output is 35 per cent higher now than it was in 2004-05.
The
Maharashtra State Action Plan on Climate Change acknowledges the
deleterious effect of cash crops on the state’s water resources, but
stops short of suggesting the reduction of their cultivation. This is
resulting in a situation where one of the driest regions of India
exports billions of litres of water every year in the form of cash crops
to other parts of India and even several countries around the world.
Meanwhile, its citizens continue to wait for another miracle to arrive
on rails to quench their thirst.
Source : The Hindu Business Line
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