Comprehensive e-flow study of Yamuna to be undertaken by govt: Officials

Press Trust of India  |  New Delhi 

A comprehensive study to assess the minimum required of the river will be undertaken by the government, according to officials.

The members of the -- launched by the Ministry of Water Resources, in 2014 -- are in talks with the (NIH) to carry out the study, the officials said.

The monitoring committee in its action plan submitted in October 2018 had recommended that a study to assess the of the river for the stretch between and Okhla must be carried out.

It had said the river is "fighting to stay alive" and it would not be possible to rejuvenate it unless minimum is provided as it is "virtually reduced to a trickle and remains dry in some stretches for almost nine months of the year".

In a meeting held between the monitoring community and experts, it was discussed that the environmental flow of 10 cusecs observed to be released at was "completely insufficient" to maintain the uninterrupted flow of the Yamuna, the officials told

Following which, they said, it was decided that a study to assess the minimum required environmental flow of the river will be undertaken by the Ministry of Water Resources,

D P Mathuria, at the National Mission for Clean Ganga, in a letter to NIH said to ascertain the amount of flow and to maintain the longitudinal integrity of the Yamuna in the stretch downstream of to Agra, it is necessary to have a comprehensive study involving supply and demand of water to return the flow.

"In view of above, I am directed to say that a comprehensive study may be undertaken to study the minimum required flow of the in the stretch from downstream of to The study shall take into account supply and demand of water, including return of flow while assessing the minimum required flow," said in the letter.

It may take around four months to complete the study, the letter, written in December last year, had said.

E-flow is a regime of flow in a river that mimics the natural pattern and refers to the quality, quantity and timing of water flows required to maintain the functions, processes and resilience of aquatic ecosystems that provide goods and services to people.

Water activist said the effort would be worth only if the study is conducted by "independent organisations that do not have and biases".

"The study should be credible and inclusive only then it would help in achieving its aim. It should be transparent and public and experts must be kept in loop. Secondly, it should also be carried out in a time-bound manner," he said.

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

First Published: Sun, January 27 2019. 11:10 IST