Shimla’s Water Crisis and the Lazy Dependency on the Government

The Mall Shimla: pic: The Hindu

(The story first appeared in  Scroll.in, June 2018)

It is ironic that only a few weeks ago the viral post   shared by Shimla residents was not “Stop visiting Shimla”, but a video of a deluge of water sweeping down The Mall Road.

Shimla region has good precipitation and is blessed with  good rainfall even in summers. In May alone, it rained at least on four  different occasions. On May 8th, the rain, accompanied by hail, was  so heavy that the roofs of hundreds of houses leaked and water poured in  sheets through the ceiling.

Yet Shimla always had a water problem.  But more than that it has a laziness problem. Back in the day,  in a boarding school here, on a bad water day, they would suspend the morning PT and march us with toothbrush and towel to brush and wash in the khuds below the school.

There was no water for the  swimming pool so the  solution was to not use it. It remained for the nine  years I was there, as a dank, dark cesspool,  collecting a medley of flotsam over the years.

Today many years later, the solution to Shimla’s water  woes  remain much the same. If there is no water,  Shimlaities   simply learn  to live without it. They have gotten used to taking their bath in rotation, whenever the water comes, which is usually once in three days. They don’t grow plants, partly because the monkeys destroy them but mainly because  where is the water to water them?

Shimla: pic: The Hindu

Last  week, however, the water crisis became so worse that the seven- days- in a -row unwashed residents stormed the newly elected CM’s residence at midnight and raised a stink.

Shimla’s  big folly, however is to assume that the government somehow has  a magic solution to its water woes.  Yes, of course, the Shimla Municipal Corporation could do better – least of all plug the leaks and save  thousands of liters of water which is  wasted each day.  The Corporation could also ensure that the water it supplies is not contaminated- like it was in December 2015, when it supplied a toxic broth of sewage and potable water, killing over 10 people and infecting hundreds of others with jaundice.

Shimla and many other places around the globe are a growing evidence of climate change coupled with an exploding population. A town designed to house only 25 thousand people today houses about 2 lakh people. This population needs at least 44 million liters of  water a day. It is unrealistic to assume that the Shimla Municipal Corporation can provide this huge amount of water even in a year of good snowfall and rain.

Shimla’s residents need to give up their hopeless dependency on the government and begin water conservation practices like harvesting and recycling water.

Shimla roofs are already sloping  and have a drain. All that needs to be done,  is to connect the down pipe to a storage tank. The rainwater can be filtered and pumped back to an overhead tank and can be used for all bathing and washing needs.

 

Drive between Kalka and Shimla is beautiful but it can get very foggy during the monsoons. (sanjay austa austa)

Shimla is blessed with good rains even in Summers

But Shimla residents somehow choose to live without water than harvest it.

A neighbor in Shimla scoffed at the idea of using rainwater when I   offered to give her the surplus from my roof.  The expectations from the government to provide  clean drinking water are  very strong. Even though time and again the corporation has let the residents down, often laying them up in hospitals or killing them with their supply, as it happened in 2015.

Just a month  after the rebuff from the neighbor , a two year old  skeleton of a four year old child (who had been kidnapped two years earlier)  was found from a Corporation Tank.

Rainwater harvesting  will immensely lessen the burden off this overstrained town. It will keep the Corporation from dredging the already drying streams and rivers.  On paper, its  compulsory for all Shimla hotels to harvest rainwater but to avoid the costs of a filtration plant  most hotels fill their rainwater tanks with  Municipal Corporation  water. Very few have any recycling plants.

 

Such beautiful meadows and glades are all across the apple region of Himachal. Here a small cowherd was minding a bunch of village cows. (sanjay austa austa)

Forests and meadows are fast being encroached by apple orchardists

Compounding this are the rich apple orchardists in Shimla district who have  illegally occupied large   swathes of forest land to plant apple trees. (Thankfully they are now   being evicted off it after an High Court order). The apple growers channel huge amounts of  potable water from streams and rivulets for their pesticide sprays. An average orchardist  sprays at least twice a  month. In one year he draws over one  lakh liters of water directly from a water source which is usually a natural  spring or a forest rivulet.

If you apply that average to my  village Ratnari, which has  about 300 households, over 30 million liters of water is utilized  here for the chemical sprays alone.   Multiply that with the thousands of villages dotting Shimla district.

To add to this, new varieties of imported apple plants that become fruit bearing  in a couple of years and are  not labour intensive  are coming into vogue. These plants  have  very shallow roots and require constant irrigation. Wealthy orchardist can easily dig  water-harvesting tanks in sprawling  land to fulfill any irrigation or spraying needs. But they prefer to petition the government to introduce water-lifting schemes, which  further suck the already dying streams dry.

In a drive to make Shimla pretty, it’s a rule for every house to paint their roofs either red or green. Non-compliance is met with a fine and everyone complies.  It takes about 30 thousand rupees to paint a roof. It takes less than  half of that to harvest rainwater.  Shimla needs to get its priorities right.

Heavy rains in May when the roofs of hundreds of houses leaked.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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