In 2018, NITI Aayog reported that 600 mn people were living in conditions of high-to-extreme water stress. This is no longer a function of delayed development. Cities, earlier considered immune, are taking the brunt. Increased use of groundwater as urban population grows is no longer a solution. Filling water bodies to construct residential high-rises has slowed groundwater recharge. The situation will worsen. Reservoirs in Karnataka, Tamil Nadu, Telangana and Andhra Pradesh are filled to 25% or less of their capacity. Water storage capacity of 13 east-flowing river basins are deficient-to-highly deficient. It is not just the south, but reservoir capacities are below last year’s levels in other parts of the country too, barring the eastern/northeastern region.
Forecasts of a warmer summer and climate change-induced disruptions in rainfall are already changing life as we know it in our cities. Tankers, transporting water, and interlinking rivers are not the solution. This is a crisis of water planning. Political parties must address this existential problem. Else, what happens in Bengaluru won’t just stay in Bengaluru.