Urban India’s water challenges are many. Resources are being spread
thin, or not at all. Neighbors are fighting with each other over a few
buckets of water. Faced with these challenges, some people are taking
matters into their own hands for the benefit of the community.
Meet India’s water warriors. Ruchi Singhal, a 43-year-old interior
designer, lives in Saket, one of South Delhi’s more affluent areas. She
installed a rain water harvesting (RWH) facility in her home in 2004.
The economics of installing this were simple. “We save about 20-25% on
our water bill every cycle,” she said.
Singhal’s children go to the area’s prestigious Mother’s International School.
“The school had set up a RWH system, which is what inspired us,” said
the mother of two. Their house channels all rain water into pipes
connected to a harvesting tank with a capacity of 3800 litres. This
water is used for mopping, washing cars and gardening.
Mindset Matters
Singhal is one of an increasing number of people across the nation
who realise the importance of taking action now to prevent future water
wars. Vinod Tare, a professor at IIT Kanpur, specializes in water and
waste-water treatment. He is a key person involved in the development of
‘zero discharge toilets’. Aligarh, his hometown, does not have a
sewerage system, making his home there a perfect testing ground for this
technology. The ingenious system recycles toilet excrements in a safe
manner, converting faecal matter into manure and passing the liquid
through micro filters and reusing it for flushing.
Apart from individual efforts like Singhal’s and Tare’s, communities
in rural areas are also waking up to better water management. Slum
dwellers in the settlement of Kachpura, near Agra, are some of India’s
early adopters of water conservation technology. With the participation
of the community, a Delhi-based NGO, CURE, has set up a waste-water
treatment system there, which treats the waste from five clusters of
slums in the area. The community was involved in the design,
construction, operation and maintenance of the system.
Singhal wishes more people would change their lifestyles and mindsets
and conserve earth’s resources. “I have a separate bucket to keep used
water (after washing vegetables or half drunk glasses) with which we
water the garden,” she said. From composting biodegradable waste to
using air-conditioning only at night, Singhal and her family reduce
their water and carbon footprint as much as possible. So, why does she
think that more people don’t adopt similar measures?
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