Water crisis leaves IT capital high & dry
IMD has attributed the scanty rains to El Nino effect
PTI
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People take drinking water from a water tap at KP Agrahara, Magadi Road, in Bengaluru, on Thursday. PHOTO: MOHAMMED ASAD
Bengaluru, 7 March
A coaching centre in Vijayanagar in
Bengaluru asked its students to attend classes online due to an 'emergency' for
a week. Similarly, a school on Bannerghatta Road shut down, asking the students
to attend classes virtually. The 'emergency' is the acute water crisis.
Karnataka, especially its capital,
is facing one of the worst water crises in recent years due to poor rainfall in
2023. Indian Meteorology Department has attributed the scanty rains to the El
Nino effect. One can gauge the grim situation from the fact that water tankers
were seen inside Chief Minister Siddaramaiah's office residence on Kumarakrupa
Road.
Deputy Chief Minister DK Shivakumar
said the borewell in his house in Sadashivanagar has gone dry for the first
time. This happened even though Sadashivanagar is located next to Sankey Lake.
Water tankers running frequently on
the Bengaluru roads have become a common sight now. On normal days, the water
suppliers used to charge Rs 700 to Rs 800 per tanker but due to excess demand,
they are charging somewhere between Rs 1,500 and Rs 1,800 per tanker, said
Shivakumar.
The office-bearers of the
Residents' Welfare Associations (RWA) in the City are facing the brunt of its
members for doing nothing to save them from the water crisis. "We are a
family of six members. A tanker of water lasts for five days even if we use it
judiciously. It means we need six tankers of water a month, which will cost us
about Rs 9,000 a month. How long can we spend money like this?"
Sharaschandra, a resident of Uttarahalli in Bengaluru, said.
Shivakumar, who is in charge of
Bengaluru Development, announced taking over private tankers and private
borewells to meet the water demand. Even milk tankers will be used to supply
water. The government is also mulling over fixing the rate for water per
tanker.
According to Siddaramaiah, out of
136 Taluks in Karnataka, 123 Taluks have been declared drought-hit and 109 are
severely affected.
According to IMD scientist A
Prasad, there was an El Nino effect last year, which is moderate this year too
but is likely to decline. Its effect was evident as summer set in the third and
fourth week of February, which otherwise happens only in March in Bengaluru, he
explained.
Bengaluru recorded 36 degrees
Celsius temperature on Wednesday (March 6), the officer said. "36 degrees
Celsius was not the highest. There were occasions when temperatures went up to
37.3 degrees in March, 1986 but that happened towards the end of the month. We
still have 24 days to go this March," Prasad pointed out.
Bangalore Water Supply and Sewerage
Board (BWSSB) as well as the Bruhat Bengaluru Mahanagara Palike are under
pressure to provide water to people. A BWSSB official said the situation is
grim because the Krishnaraja Sagar Dam in Mandya district from where Cauvery
water is supplied to Bengaluru does not have adequate water.
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