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Wednesday, 08 February 2012

Bangladesh to face severe water crisis within next two decades

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Reported by: UNBconnect
Reported on: August 21, 2010 15:33 PM
Reported in: National
News - Bangladesh to face severe water crisis within next two decades

Dhaka, Aug 21 (UNB) - Bangladesh will face severe water challenge within next couple of decades due to random contamination of surface and underground water, absence of comprehensive water sharing with neighboring countries and mismanagement in preserving rain water.

According to water experts, although the whole world is seriously thinking of conserving their water resources for ensuring water security, Bangladesh is destroying its surface and underground water
by throwing wastes in water bodies and over extracting underground water.

They say, as the origin of all principal rivers of Bangladesh is outside the country, those rivers depend on upstream water to continue its flow and the country will not be able to address water
related problems without integrated initiative with the neighboring countries.

About 92 percent of the catchments area of the Ganges, Brahmaputra and Meghna (GBM) rivers are located outside Bangladesh while the GBM river basin is around 64 percent in India, 18 percent in China, 9 percent in Nepal, and 3 percent in Bhutan.

It is estimated that the catchments area of the Ganges, Brahmaputra and Meghna rivers is 12 times the size of Bangladesh.

Former UN water expert Dr SI Khan told UNB reporter Rafiqul Islam that the water dispute with India is as old as the inception of Bangladesh. It started even before Bangladesh when India’s
ill-conceived Farakka Barrage on the Ganges was built to divert water for flushing silt from the Hooghly River.

Bangladesh has unresolved issues with regard to sharing of waters of trans-boundary rivers with India. Although Bangladesh has 54 major trans-boundary rivers with India, there is only one Water Sharing Treaty with India on the Ganges River signed on December 12 in 1996, he said.

“But, India removed the guarantee and arbitration clauses in getting minimum water from the treaty,” he said.

Dr Khan, also a visiting professor of BRAC University, alleged that the Indian government has planned to construct a 163 meter high Tipaimukh Dam in Barak River to divert the water to other places in India.

“If India will implement the project, the downstream Meghna River will lose its water flow and the country will gradually turn into desert amid acute water crisis,” he said.

About the random use of underground water, Dr Khan said generally, people in the country extract underground water through shallow and deep tube-wells for drinking, irrigation, household use, and other reasons.

“Water level of underground water decreases five meter per year. The water level is recharged four meter by flood water and one meter by rain water every year.”

He fears that if the water flow of the rivers in the country will shrink for lack of adequate water in future, the underground water level will decline in absence of water recharge, thus forcing the
country into acute water crisis.

Another water expert, Sardar M Shah-Newaz said considering the climate change impact, groundwater level will decline due to shortage of rainfall in the country’s northern region - Barind area - within 20 years.

“Although rainfall will increase in future in other places of the country, Barind region will turn into desert because of shortfall in rain and an acute water crisis will occur in the area,” he said.

Shah-Newaz, also director of Flood Division, Institute of Water Modelling (IWM), said the upcoming water challenge may be addressed by properly managing the rain water.

“Many countries have taken long-term measures to manage rain water for addressing water crisis, but Bangladesh is yet to take any comprehensive step to face the upcoming water challenge.”

He said that although Bangladesh earlier planned to build barrages on three major rivers - Ganges, Brahmaputra and Meghna - those initiatives are yet to be implemented.

Chairman of National Disaster Management Advisory Council Dr MA Quassem said water availability in Bangladesh is around 90 billion cubic meters (BCM) during the dry season against the demand of about 147 BCM - a shortfall of nearly 40 percent, resulting in drought-like situation in large parts of the country.

“Water shortage in the dry season affects all water using sectors. Due to inadequate surface water, ground water is extensively used for irrigation and the over-extraction is causing deterioration of its
quality,” he said.

According to a recent study, over 200 dams are to be built by China and India on the Himalayan rivers including Brahmaputra and Ganges to meet their water demands that will force Bangladesh into a big water crisis.

An India-based Strategic Foresight Group conducted the study titled “The Himalayan Challenge - Water Security in Emerging Asia”. The study report was released on June 28 at an international workshop in Singapore on river basins management.

The study reveals that due to building of such dams, water flow of Bangladeshi rivers will change in dry season and up to 22 percent water supply will decrease over the next two decades and the sea
level rise may push Bangladesh to the risks of food insecurity, outbreak of water-borne diseases and loss of bio-diversity.

Himalayan river basins in China, Bangladesh, India and Nepal will face massive water depletion within 20 years, leading to a decline in food and mass migration, the study says.

The study also says, due to natural reasons like glacial melting, the four countries would lose almost 275 billion cubic meters of annual renewable water in the next two decades, more than the total amount of available water in Nepal at present.

Water availability is estimated to decline in 2030 compared to present level by 13.50 percent in case of China, by 28 percent in case of India, by 22 percent in case of Bangladesh and by 35 percent in case of Nepal.

About 10-20 percent of the Himalayan rivers are fed by Himalayan glaciers and the study says that about 70 percent of these glaciers will be melted by the next century as a result of accelerated global climate change.

The study stressed the need for more cooperation between the four nations in the management of the river basins.

“What we are looking at here is a major catastrophe… going to happen in 20, 25 years,” the India-based Strategic Foresight Group president, Sundeep Waslekar, told a seminar at the Singapore International Water Week recently.

The Himalayan River Basins (Ganges, Bramhaputra, Indus, Yangtze) in China, Nepal, India and Bangladesh are inhabited by around 1.3 billion people.

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