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UN lauds India's efforts in finding nature-based solutions to global water crisis

Press Trust of India  |  United Nations 

The efforts by local communities in to improve availability have been lauded in a UN report that highlights the importance of finding nature-based solutions to meet global challenges.

With five billion people at risk of having difficulty accessing adequate by 2050, finding nature-based solutions is becoming increasingly important, the UN World Development Report 2018 said in a report yesterday.

The report, released at the world's largest water-related event in Brazil, gave examples of nature-based solutions such as such as China's rainwater recycling, India's forest regeneration and Ukraine's artificial wetlands.

"We need new solutions in managing resources so as to meet emerging challenges to security caused by population growth and climate change," said Audrey Azoulay, of the UN Educational, (UNESCO), in the foreword of the UN World Development Report 2018.

"If we do nothing, some five billion people will be living in areas with poor access to by 2050," she added.

The report notes that the global demand for has been increasing and will continue to grow significantly over the next two decades due to population growth, economic development and changing consumption patterns.

It cites the example of efforts undertaken by a non-governmental organisation in that supported local communities to undertake landscape-scale restoration of local cycles and resources in the state when it was facing one of the worst droughts in its history in 1986.

However, over the following years, Sangh worked alongside local communities to regenerate soils and forests in the region by setting up harvesting structures. This led to a 30 per cent increase in forest cover, groundwater levels rose by several metres and cropland productivity improved.

"The case study of in Rajasthan, India, presents an excellent example of the way in which low- cost community-led landscape approaches can improve both groundwater recharge and surface availability through combining the management of soil, vegetation and structural (physical) interventions," the report said.

The UN report also lauded the leadership provided by women, who customarily take responsibility for providing their families with safe freshwater. Activities centred on the construction of small- scale harvesting structures combined with the regeneration of forests and soils, particularly in upper catchments, helped improve the recharge of groundwater resources.

The impact of these efforts was significant, with groundwater levels rising by an estimated six metres; productive farmland increasing from 20 per cent to 80 per cent of the catchment and crucial forest cover, including in farmlands, which helps to maintain the integrity and water-retaining capacity of the soil, increasing by 33 per cent.

"These innovative solutions improved security in rural India," the report said.

It added that Goal 6 of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development adopted by world leaders in 2015 seeks to achieve universal and equitable access to safe and affordable drinking for all and, also access to adequate and equitable and hygiene for all by 2030.

Due to climate change, wetter regions are becoming wetter, and drier regions are becoming even drier. At present, an estimated 3.6 billion people, nearly half the global population, live in areas potentially water-scarce at least one month per year, and this population could increase to some 4.8 billion to 5.7 billion by 2050.

The report notes that reservoirs, irrigation canals and treatment plants are not the only management instruments at disposal.

It also cited the example of China's Sponge City which aims to recycle 70 per cent of rainwater. Faced with an ever-increasing demand for water, recently initiated the project Sponge City to improve availability in urban settlements with the aim of recycling 70 per cent of rainwater.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Tue, March 20 2018. 11:10 IST
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