Thursday, July 2, 2015

Rain Water Harvesting - an imminent necessity

My mother remembers being able to feel the water in a well by just lowering her arm into it. This was the situation decades back in a water-well in my cousins’ place, right beside our house in Cuttack. Today, the well has water a few feet below; this being in a city surrounded by two rivers. Ground water depletion is not alien if you are living in bigger cities like Chennai, Bangalore, Delhi, etc. In Bangalore, 800-1000 feet depth is the norm of new bore wells in most areas. 20 years back, a 150 feet bore well was sufficient to get water in that area. Rampant usage and removal of rain water harvesting sites like lakes and ponds are the causes of this. Ponds being replaced with high rises are a common sight in every developing city. 

more than 200 days of free swach water considering Kejriwal’s 700 litre per day use. Imagine the amount of rainwater wasted every year.

What is ground water? 


Ground water is the rain water percolated in the earth’s porous surface. Consider the surface below us a huge water storage. The top soil layers (sand, silt, gravel) are porous. Rain water gets absorbed through these and moves down by gravity till it reaches an impermeable surface rock or cracks in such rocks. The rain water saturated in this region can be extracted for use by drilling a well. These water bearing rocks or unconsolidated materials (sand, silt, gravel) are referred to as an aquifer. The depth at which aquifers are found depends on the geology of the place and amount of rainfall it receives. In rocky high altitude Bangalore, the water table lies much lower than the riverbed city of Cuttack where bore wells of 100 feet can suffice. Bhubaneswar, the twin city of Cuttack, has a lower water table too owing to its slightly higher altitude and distance from big rivers. Apart from that, rampant construction has lead to ground water shrinkage in the capital city. New bore wells have average depths of more than 200 feet here. Well it is undeniable that dry aquifers can lead to catastrophic effects on human civilization; storm water off buildings and roads causing flash floods, or dry wells aiding water tanker mafias. 


The percolation pit and recharge well are functionally similar to a soak pit.

What can be done to recharge the ground water? 


Ground water has depleted because rain water has not been allowed to enter the aquifers. In urban areas, there are a few ways to recharge the ground water. One of the simplest ways is rain water harvesting off the surface of buildings instead of letting it run off in the storm water drains. Storing the rain water in underground tanks/sumps or drums is very effective. Rain water is one of the purest sources of water. However, the roof surface must be clean enough to ensure that this water is potable. A simple mesh filter is often enough to use this water for most purposes like cleaning, washing, bathing, etc. This directly reduces your water consumption. Rain water is water filtered to perfection by nature. When this water reaches polluted rivers or streams via storm water drains, it gets contaminated. Pumping and treating this water back to houses is wastage of huge amounts of energy. Soak-pits are another simple way of recharging ground aquifers. A soak-pit is essentially a small dug out pit lined and layered with permeable materials like sand, coal, gravel, etc where rain water is allowed to flow, get absorbed and filter into the aquifers. A small soak-pit of 4x4x4 (feet) dimension can do wonders to increasing your ground water level. Larger the soak-pit, greater is the water absorbed. 


Aquifer
Another important way is recharging your bore well directly with the rain water. This process involves adding filters to the rooftop storm water discharge pipe. Every defunct bore well should be fitted so. Alternatively, one can dig up a soak-pit near the bore well. This would filter the water better and prevent clogging but a lot of water would have to be diverted away as its capacity & filtration rates are low. 

How much water can be collected? 


Rain water collected = Area of catchment (roof) X Total rainfall in a year. For Bhubaneswar, which receives around 1500 mm of rain every year, the rain water that can be collected from 100 square meters roof is 150000 litres. This means more than 200 days of free swach water considering Kejriwal’s 700 litre per day use. Imagine the amount of rainwater wasted every year. 

Rain water harvesting needs to be implemented both on the individual and organizational level. The government needs to introduce laws which mandate rain water harvesting in every building and plot of land. Some states in India have laws for bigger buildings. Apart from that, community and public rain water harvesting projects can be undertaken to improve ground water levels. Soak-pits or recharge pits by the side of roads can immediately reduce chances of flash floods while recharging dried aquifers below. High rise buildings, where consumption is high per unit area, can greatly benefit from rain water to bore-well recharges. According to a recent report, 80% of surface water in India is contaminated. Water is extremely precious; we have to start caring immediately. 

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