What's new

War or peace on the Indus?

BanglaBhoot

RETIRED TTA
Joined
Apr 8, 2007
Messages
8,839
Reaction score
5
Country
France
Location
France
I have deep affection for the people of both India and Pakistan, and am dismayed by what I see as a looming train wreck on the Indus, with disastrous consequences for both countries,
writes John Briscoe



Anyone foolish enough to write on war or peace in the Indus needs to first banish a set of immediate suspicions. I am neither Indian nor Pakistani. I am a South African who has worked on water issues in the subcontinent for 35 years and who has lived in Bangladesh (in the 1970s) and Delhi (in the 2000s). In 2006 I published, with fine Indian colleagues, an Oxford University Press book titled India’s Water Economy: Facing a Turbulent Future and, with fine Pakistani colleagues, one titled Pakistan’s Water Economy: Running Dry.
I was the Senior Water Advisor for the World Bank who dealt with the appointment of the Neutral Expert on the Baglihar case. My last assignment at the World Bank (relevant, as described later) was as Country Director for Brazil. I am now a mere university professor, and speak in the name of no one but myself.

I have deep affection for the people of both India and Pakistan, and am dismayed by what I see as a looming train wreck on the Indus, with disastrous consequences for both countries. I will outline why there is no objective conflict of interests between the countries over the waters of the Indus Basin, make some observations of the need for a change in public discourse, and suggest how the drivers of the train can put on the brakes before it is too late.

Is there an inherent conflict between India and Pakistan?

The simple answer is no. The Indus Waters Treaty allocates the water of the three western rivers to Pakistan, but allows India to tap the considerable hydropower potential of the Chenab and Jhelum before the rivers enter Pakistan.

The qualification is that this use of hydropower is not to affect either the quantity of water reaching Pakistan or to interfere with the natural timing of those flows. Since hydropower does not consume water, the only issue is timing. And timing is a very big issue, because agriculture in the Pakistani plains depends not only on how much water comes, but that it comes in critical periods during the planting season. The reality is that India could tap virtually all of the available power without negatively affecting the timing of flows to which Pakistan is entitled.

Is the Indus Treaty a stable basis for cooperation?

If Pakistan and India had normal, trustful relations, there would be a mutually-verified monitoring process which would assure that there is no change in the flows going into Pakistan. (In an even more ideal world, India could increase low-flows during the critical planting season, with significant benefit to Pakistani farmers and with very small impacts on power generation in India.) Because the relationship was not normal when the treaty was negotiated, Pakistan would agree only if limitations on India’s capacity to manipulate the timing of flows was hardwired into the treaty. This was done by limiting the amount of “live storage” (the storage that matters for changing the timing of flows) in each and every hydropower dam that India would construct on the two rivers.

While this made sense given knowledge in 1960, over time it became clear that this restriction gave rise to a major problem. The physical restrictions meant that gates for flushing silt out of the dams could not be built, thus ensuring that any dam in India would rapidly fill with the silt pouring off the young Himalayas.

This was a critical issue at stake in the Baglihar case. Pakistan (reasonably) said that the gates being installed were in violation of the specifications of the treaty. India (equally reasonably) argued that it would be wrong to build a dam knowing it would soon fill with silt. The finding of the Neutral Expert was essentially a reinterpretation of the Treaty, saying that the physical limitations no longer made sense. While the finding was reasonable in the case of Baglihar, it left Pakistan without the mechanism – limited live storage – which was its only (albeit weak) protection against upstream manipulation of flows in India. This vulnerability was driven home when India chose to fill Baglihar exactly at the time when it would impose maximum harm on farmers in downstream Pakistan.

If Baglihar was the only dam being built by India on the Chenab and Jhelum, this would be a limited problem. But following Baglihar is a veritable caravan of Indian projects – Kishanganga, Sawalkot, Pakuldul, Bursar, Dal Huste, Gyspa… The cumulative live storage will be large, giving India an unquestioned capacity to have major impact on the timing of flows into Pakistan. (Using Baglihar as a reference, simple back-of-the-envelope calculations, suggest that once it has constructed all of the planned hydropower plants on the Chenab, India will have an ability to effect major damage on Pakistan. First, there is the one-time effect of filling the new dams. If done during the wet season this would have little effect on Pakistan.

—The writer is the Gordon McKay Professor of Environmental Engineering, Harvard University.

The News Today
 
.
Pakistan Seeks Resolution of India Water Dispute

By TOM WRIGHT in Lahore, Pakistan, and AMOL SHARMA in New Delhi

The Wall Street Journal – May 20, 2010


Pakistan told India it wants to begin formal arbitration proceedings over an Indian dam project in Kashmir, threatening to heighten tensions ahead of high-level bilateral talks.

Pakistan says India's planned hydropower dam on the Kishanganga River would violate a 50-year-old water-sharing treaty between the two neighbors by diverting water Pakistan needs for agriculture and power generation.

India denies its project would violate the 1960 Indus Waters Treaty. It has received Pakistan's request for arbitration and is examining it, an Indian official said.

Water disputes have become a growing point of controversy between the rivals in recent months, and could become an impediment as they seek to re-establish diplomatic ties. India cut off dialogue with Pakistan after the November 2008 Mumbai terrorist attacks, but has shown an interest in restarting talks if Pakistan cracks down on terrorists on its soil.

Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and Pakistani Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani met last month at a regional summit and agreed to move forward with dialogue. The countries' chief foreign-policy bureaucrats will meet in late June to prepare an agenda for mid-July, when their external affairs ministers are expected to meet in Islamabad.

In previous rounds of diplomacy, India and Pakistan have discussed issues ranging from trade to the fate of Kashmir, the disputed territory that is two-thirds controlled by India and over which the countries have fought two of their three wars.

India has said it is open to discussing all issues in the current talks, though shutting down terrorist groups and getting Pakistan to more aggressively prosecute Mumbai suspects are its core objectives.
India has said river-sharing disputes should be settled through the 1960 treaty, rather than in the bilateral talks. The accord split six Himalayan rivers between the countries, with the three Western ones going to Pakistan, the three Eastern ones to India, and each side retaining the right to the other side's resources for uses such as run-of-river hydropower and irrigation.

Under the treaty, the countries nominate commissioners who share data and try to resolve problems as they arise. If the commissioners can't agree, they can seek a World Bank-appointed expert to intervene, which happened in 2005 when Pakistan objected to another big dam. India was told to make minor changes to its design.

Jamaat Ali Shah, Pakistan's Indus waters commissioner, said the country is now seeking formal arbitration proceedings—a treaty mechanism that neither side has used before—because it feels India is stalling on the Kishanganga dispute.

Pakistan on Wednesday named two members that would sit on a seven-person arbitration panel. Under the treaty, India has 30 days to name its own two members, and the countries are supposed to jointly name the three other participants. If they can't agree, the World Bank would step in to name them.

Pakistani farmers and Islamist groups have staged protests against India's 330-megawatt hydroelectric project on the Kishanganga, which is a tributary to one of the rivers Pakistan was allotted under the treaty.

Water availability in Pakistan has fallen 70% since the early 1950s to 1,500 cubic meters per capita, according to a report last year by the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars. India says Pakistan's poor water management is responsible for the water shortages it is experiencing in some regions.

Pakistan Raises India Water Dispute - WSJ.com
 
.
Thanks for the articles Munshi. Well, I wasn't aware of this timing issue.

Seems like there's a quandary here. India would be well within its rights to construct dams and store up water as it needs to meet the scaling demand for power in the country. Pakistan, with all its water supplies flowing from the East cannot afford a loss of water during the important sowing seasons.

I think the treaty has to be renegotiated to negate any possibility of war in the future and for the sake of lasting peace. Though I am no expert and I draw from the first article, but it does seem like being the bigger partner India might have to be magnanimous towards Pakistan and restrict filling up the dams during the sowing seasons. By doing that India would have to forego some power generation for the benefit of Pakistani farmers. Pakistan could reciprocate by a) agreeing to the renegotiation of the treaty and b) allowing India to build more dams without any hassle.

But the above solution would require considerable amount of trust from both sides. India would of course like to get a grip on the jugular vein of Pakistan economy and would be hesitant to let go of a big bargaining tool like water in the event of a future terror attack emanating from Pakistani soil. After all, lets face it India knows fully well the importance of the rivers to Pakistani agriculture and hence the economy. Pakistan on its part would have to trust India to not violate the treaty by holding up excess water. The side-topics of Kashmir and terrorism are but other factors that could impact the issue.
 
.
Trust is in extreme short supply in the Sub Continent, in the days ahead it is not expected to increase either.

Post 1 shows India's stand to be correct. Timing is an issue which could be got around if the all elusive ' T' word was there.

Unfortunately , the 'T' exists in the form of Terrorists & not Trust. Both these 't's are like similar poles - they repel each other.

India's stand has been to reign in the terrorists & trust will follow.
 
. .
No matter who's write or wrong but in the end it will be the common man who will suffer.......:frown:

SO True.

India: "No water till you reign in terrorist"
Pakistan: "Give us water or we wont reign in terrorists and will go to war"

Its like two kids arguing in a playground. except in this case, people will suffer.
 
.
Thanks for the articles Munshi! .... Though I am no expert and I draw from the first article, but it does seem like being the bigger partner India might have to be magnanimous towards Pakistan and restrict filling up the dams during the sowing seasons. By doing that India would have to forego some power generation for the benefit of Pakistani farmers. Pakistan could reciprocate by a) agreeing to the renegotiation of the treaty and b) allowing India to build more dams without any hassle.

But the above solution would require considerable amount of trust from both sides. India would of course like to get a grip on the jugular vein of Pakistan economy and would be hesitant to let go of a big bargaining tool like water in the event of a future terror attack emanating from Pakistani soil. After all, lets face it India knows fully well the importance of the rivers to Pakistani agriculture and hence the economy. Pakistan on its part would have to trust India to not violate the treaty by holding up excess water. The side-topics of Kashmir and terrorism are but other factors that could impact the issue.

I think this is a great topic! I too did not know about the 'timing' issue. So a 'technical right' given to India under IWTreaty can become a 'strategic' weapon in case of 'terrorism' against India? 'Terrorism'? ! Let's not kid ourselves here: ALL conflicts in this world are basically 'secular' in nature. You can cloak, hide, obfuscate and use all the tools of rhetorics but basically we are fighting for resources. Karl Marx may have died in Soviet Union but he was correct philosophically and scientifically.
Anyway, India would be playing with fire if India thinks that a nuclear-armed Pakistani nation can be blackmailed by controlling Pakistan's 'jugular' vein. I say this not with valor but with great solmnity that there are enough emotional people in South Asia to 'go the nuclear route'.

Yet there are rays of hope. I think the current Indian PM is a wise person. He knows that the 'peace dividends' can bring so much prosperity to everyone. I think he is trying and he knows that the Pakistani side is trying even harder since Musharraf era. We should all know that having prosperous and stable neighbors are good for own selves. A country is no different from a house. Indians look with concern at a 'unstable' Pakistan. And Pakistanis look at the Afghans.

Peace with India and peace between Pakistan and India can help Pakistan cut down on its defence expenditure. Pakistan can neutralize the pseudo-Jihadi elements within Pakistan. The peace dividends can be used to build dasalination plants, for lining up canals, for making smaller dams and water reservoirs, for better argicultural water-wise technologies....

The possibilities given to us by the Peace Dividends far out-weigh the 'what if' or 'IF' or 'when' like rhetorical mental blocks. To this day, mercifully, despite all the grandstanding, Indians and Pakistanis have not butchered each other like the Europeans did TWICE in a mere span of 30 years during the two global wars. That shows me that we have more in common than we often care to acknowledge or talk about.
 
.
SO True.

India: "No water till you reign in terrorist"
Pakistan: "Give us water or we wont reign in terrorists and will go to war"

Its like two kids arguing in a playground. except in this case, people will suffer.

You are totally wrong here.
You people make yourself terror and, then blame Pakistan as usual.
:pakistan:
 
. .
I have deep affection for the people of both India and Pakistan, and am dismayed by what I see as a looming train wreck on the Indus, with disastrous consequences for both countries,
writes John Briscoe



Anyone foolish enough to write on war or peace in the Indus needs to first banish a set of immediate suspicions. I am neither Indian nor Pakistani. I am a South African who has worked on water issues in the subcontinent for 35 years and who has lived in Bangladesh (in the 1970s) and Delhi (in the 2000s). In 2006 I published, with fine Indian colleagues, an Oxford University Press book titled India’s Water Economy: Facing a Turbulent Future and, with fine Pakistani colleagues, one titled Pakistan’s Water Economy: Running Dry.
I was the Senior Water Advisor for the World Bank who dealt with the appointment of the Neutral Expert on the Baglihar case. My last assignment at the World Bank (relevant, as described later) was as Country Director for Brazil. I am now a mere university professor, and speak in the name of no one but myself.
X-posting...


The writer does not give enough credit to IWT which has worked despite enmity between treaty states. It says Pakistan is fearful that India would /might use its leverage if all dams are constructed. It doubts intention of India to inflict major damage on Pakistan through mechanism of IWT without showing any proof, except saying that Baghlihar was filled up when PaKistan needed water. It also blames Indian media for not objectively reporting official indian position and existential vulnerabilities of PaKistan . It overlooks what Pakistan is saying and doing vis-a-vis many Indian concerns. There is very little doubt in India that Pakistan actively encourages terrorist acts, even plans directs and executes which would not be possible if Pakistan state is not involved.

It then asks India to be magnanimous and reinterpret treaty in such a way that forgoes leverages which is available to it.
Unfortunately , the article does not say that official forum including IWT comm and Foreign Minister have duly acknowledged that India is not in violation of IWT. The problem faced by PK in irrigating its agri field is of its own making. The article expects that official Indian position should be that we deliberately violate IWT due to enmity with PK whereas media reports that India is in full compliance with IWT.

Upshot of this is
1. Be courageous for the existence of Pakistan
2. Give leadership to become truly great power and good neighbour
3.Invite Pakistan for IWT
4. Delink IWT from other issues.

Essential article asks India to take initiative to open pandora's box without any commensurate benefit except removing legal uncertainty ( pakistan not challenging any and all IWT projects of India, however he is not in a position to guarantee that).

In my view article fails to make any case for India to seek any of the four positions when it comes to Pakistan, especially when it is not yet proved that IWT has broken down.

Existential problems of pakistan and its bad neighbourly behaviour is of its own making and they should make amends and prove their credentials to the writer. WE don't need such lecturing.

---------- Post added at 03:17 AM ---------- Previous post was at 03:16 AM ----------

Baglihar was filled during august 2008 monsoon season.Moreover for the so called IWT expert this is what Annexure E, article 18 of IWT says

Quote:
India may carry out the filling as follows :
(a) if the site is on The Indus, between 1st July and 20th August ;
(b) if the site is on The Jhelum, between 21st June and 20th August ; and
(c) if the site is on The Chenab, between 21st June and 31st August at such rate as not to reduce, on account of this filling, the flow in the Chenab Main above Merala to less than 55,000 cusecs.
 
.
X-posting

pertaining to the following article here is its counter.John Briscoe is just spreading pakistani propaganda in the guise of neutral expert on IWT.

Originally Posted by ajtr
War or peace on the Indus?

Saturday, April 03, 2010
John Briscoe

He wrote:
"This vulnerability was driven home when India chose to fill Baglihar exactly at the time when it would impose maximum harm on farmers in downstream Pakistan."




Best I can find, India filled Baglihar in August 2008.
E.g., The Dawn reports August 23, 2008, about the filling of the Baglihar.
http://www.dawn.com/2008/08/23/top15.htm[/B]]India filling Baglihar Dam in violation of treaty -DAWN - Top Stories; August 23, 2008

This is squarely in the middle of the monsoon season, which runs from June to September (e.g., as per Wiki)
Monsoon - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

As per the Hindu, the rains in Indian Punjab were mostly normal at that time.
http://www.thehindu.com/2008/08/17/stor ... 621000.htm

Quote:
In Uttar Pradesh, 34 out of the 64 districts have recorded excess rainfall, 20 normal and five deficient. In Punjab, 10 out of the 16 districts have recorded excess rainfall, four normal and two deficient.

---
The Pakistani growing seasons are:
Agriculture Problems in Pakistan And Their Solutions SAP-PK Blog ... solutions/

Crop | Sowing season | Harvesting season
Kharif | April – June | Oct – Dec
Rabi | Oct – Dec | April – May

----
I.e., India filled Baglihar in the middle of the monsoon.

Also in 2008, the monsoon rains were quite heavy in Pakistan.

http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/Natura ... p?id=20333
Quote:

Unusually intense monsoon rains pounded Pakistan in late July and early August 2008.

-----

Therefore, he may be a very well-intentioned South African, but he has essentially shot his credibility with any concerned Indians - unless he can explain exactly what he meant by

""This vulnerability was driven home when India chose to fill Baglihar exactly at the time when it would impose maximum harm on farmers in downstream Pakistan."

-----

If he want to do any good for India and Pakistan whose people he claim to love, he had better stick strictly to telling the truth.


Moreover for the so called IWT expert this is what Annexure E, article 18 of IWT says

Quote:
India may carry out the filling as follows :
(a) if the site is on The Indus, between 1st July and 20th August ;
(b) if the site is on The Jhelum, between 21st June and 20th August ; and
(c) if the site is on The Chenab, between 21st June and 31st August at such rate as not to reduce, on account of this filling, the flow in the Chenab Main above Merala to less than 55,000 cusecs
 
.
X-posting

The writer has shied away from the real issue. He hinted but did not elaborate upon it in his solution.
Given that the Indian Press takes its lead from the Indian Ministry of External Affairs it does not follow that merely informing the Indian public of Pakistan’s fears would solve anything.
Also, so far as I am aware, Baglihar was not filled in the low season. It was filled in the monsoon season.
The writer is correct in saying that creating live storage on all those dams will cause a certain amount of water shortage, cumulatively, but this accumulated shortage is going to be spread over 30 years or more, the time it will take at the minimum, to build those dams. Remember, it has taken India 50 years to build the three relatively large projects on the Chenab, Dul Hasti, Baglihar and Salal. It has managed to put only one large project on the Jehlum in that period, the Uri project. Any threat of a water shortage to Pakistan on account of these proposed dams can be discounted for that reason alone.
Let us also further remember that the Indus Waters Treaty allots 80% of the combined Indus waters to Pakistan. India gets only 20% and even that is not yet fully exploited either for irrigation, drinking or power.
The solution at which the author hinted (and I wish he had devoted more space to it) is to develop dead storage on the rivers allotted to Pakistan, not just live storage. This would benefit India and Pakistan. India would increase its capacity to generate power and Pakistan would gain by more lean season flows when they are needed and less flooding at the wrong time. India has been suggesting such a solution to Pakistan but to no effect. The opportunity to build upstream regulation will be lost forever once all the dams planned in India are built. The time is now. It will be impossible to tear down the structures and rebuild new ones in some idyllic future where India and Pakistan are friends, or where Pakistan has defeated India and won Jammu and Kashmir for itself. Already the sites of Salal, Baglihar, Dul Hasti and Uri have been lost, but upstream regulation of water is still possible, if India and Pakistan can come to an agreement.
And this where the question of trust arises. Does threatening India with war over water help anyone?
Kashmir is one permanent casus belli, now we have a second one in the making.
The goodwill that Professor Briscoe talks about, which is so essential to resolving the waters issue let alone Kashmir, cannot be conjured out of thin air. Those confidence building measures were proposed nearly a decade now and we haven’t moved one inch. How does Professor Briscoe expect the Indian Ministry of External Affairs to react to the threats from the likes of Hafiz Saeed, or the references to India as Pakistan’s main enemy by the PA Chief except with anger. It is naive of the Professor to expect the Indian government to sympathize with Pakistan’s water shortage, or, in the face of the unremitting hostility to coach its citizens to be sensitive to Pakistan’s needs. Why would it do that? It has an active political opposition to counter, and eventually, voters to face. Besides Indian sensitivity by itself solves nothing.
India’s states are at each others throats over water, including its own share of Indus waters. Pakistan can help itself and India by modifying its attitudes over the Indus waters, if not over Kashmir. In friendship and trust all sorts of things become possible. In the case of the Indus Waters though, it wont always be so. The window is now.

---------- Post added at 03:52 AM ---------- Previous post was at 03:52 AM ----------

There is one more issue- almost all of Pak’s three western rivers get much of their water from glacier melt unlike Gangetic rivers which also get a lot of their hydrology from rainfalls and not just snowmelt. Thus Indus rivers will be more vulnerable to receding glaciers- most of Indus and Jhelum glaicers will be gone in another generation of so, if I understand correct. My impression as a Delhi-ite for almost 30 years is that it rains a lot less in winter and there is far less frequent snowfall in Western Himalayas. Even if we co-operate on dams there may not be much water to capture anyways.

---------- Post added at 03:53 AM ---------- Previous post was at 03:52 AM ----------

The moot point is that actually India has never been found guilty of any breach of treaty on IWT. It was merely asked to reduce its dam height by a couple of meters in Baglihar (???)As far as timing issue is concerned, I believe IWT has a 24 hour deadline- i.e whatever water enters the dam must leave within the same day, so if water is being used for hydel generation, I dont see how it can be used for delaying Pak requirements beyond a few hours.

Btw, didnt some Pak minister too say recently that the water thing was more about Pak mismanagement than Indian kanjoosi

---------- Post added at 03:53 AM ---------- Previous post was at 03:53 AM ----------

India did not fill Baglihar in the low season. The professor is quite wrong. Nor did Pakistan object when India filled Salal or Uri. There was no need to because it was all perfectly legal. But by the time Baglihar came up the discourse of cheating by India had begun to take hold in Pakistan.
Take the case of Salal. The dam is silting up, but Pakistan will not allow silt ejection gates to be built in any project. The Tulbal navigation project in Kashmir on the Wular would raise the lake by about three metres and enable better flood control in the valley as in Pakistan, plus raise the power potential of down stream dams without taking any water away from Pakistan. Yet it is stuck for the last 30 years.
The point is that Professor Briscoe does not elaborate the real solution that he hinted at in the very beginning. He merely castigates India for not being friendly with Pakistan, and the MEA, not for being untruthful or cheating but for being insensitive about Pakistan. Given the state of relations between our two countries that is nothing startling or immoral. If India and Pakistan were friends they could help each other in many ways-as enemies they both lose something.
Where there are interstate water disputes in India the states concerned don’t have sympathy for each other, nor does Delhi; it looks on neutrally or intervenes in favour of one state or the other depending on which party is in power. To expect the Indian government to build up sympathy for Pakistan is unrealistic, and what would it serve-the solution won’t come through sympathy. The last 13 years have seen not only reduced snowfall but also reduced monsoons in the North. The wettest months in Kashmir used to be March and April, but now it seems to get only a few showers in that period.
Thought the Himalyan glaciers are not melting as fast as feared they are retreating. Underground water levels in the Punjab and Haryana have dropped by 50 feet and more. Underground water reservoirs are no longer being charged at the same rate, and water is being mined from deeper aquifers by submersible pumps in both states.
It is not possible to siphon off water through underground channels that harvest water. What comes into the rivers is the run off after ground absorption. The rivers are the harvest. Besides the water that does go underground into aquifers need not end up in a desired area. With the present state of technology who can say what aquifer is fed by which run off. The bore wells along the Indo- Pak border probably tap into the same aquifers.

---------- Post added at 03:53 AM ---------- Previous post was at 03:53 AM ----------

Politicians and Islamic outfits in Pakistan accuse India of stealing upstream Indus system waters, threatening Pakistan’s very existence. More sober Pakistanis complain that numerous new Indian projects on the Jhelum and Chenab will create substantial live storage even in run-of-the-river hydel dams. This will enable India to drastically reduce flows to Pakistan during the crucial sowing season, something that actually happened for a couple of days when the Baglihar reservoir was filled by India after dam completion. What this debate misses is that dam-based canal irrigation is an obsolete, wasteful 19th century technology that cannot meet 21st century needs. It must be replaced by sprinkler and drip irrigation, distributed through pressurised plastic pipes. This approach has enabled Israel to irrigate the desert. It can enable India and Pakistan to triple the irrigated area with their existing water resources, escaping water scarcity. Drip and sprinkler irrigation systems are expensive. They use a lot of power for pumping. But they greatly improve yields too. Israel’s agriculture is highly competitive.

Canals are hugely wasteful of both land and water, something well-captured in Tushaar Shah’s book ‘Taming the Anarchy’. Up to 7 per cent of the command area of a conventional irrigation project is taken up by canals, and this no longer makes sense when land is worth lakhs per acre. In the Narmada command area, farmers have refused to give up their land to build distributaries from the main Narmada canal, so only a small portion of the irrigation potential is actually used today.

Instead of canals, we can transport water through underground pipes that leave the land above free for cultivation. Indeed, the downhill flow of water through massive pipes can run turbines, generating electricity for pumping the water to the surface where required.

Gujarat has shown the way out of this water crisis. It has gone in a big way for drip and sprinkler irrigation. It has been rewarded with an astounding agricultural growth rate of 9 per cent despite being a semi-arid state. Jain Irrigation has become one of the biggest producers of drip and sprinkler equipment in the world, and other corporate rivals are coming up fast.

Like Gujarat, India and Pakistan need to replace canal-based irrigation with pipe-based irrigation. India has world-class technology and equipment that it can share with Pakistan. Such co-operation cannot end controversies over Indus water sharing. But it can take the sting out of them.
 
.
.
Oh and just to add to the mix - China is contemplating building one of the largest damns ever conjured - on the Brahmaputra which could potentially affect water flows to Assam in India and to Bangladesh.
 
.
Oh and just to add to the mix - China is contemplating building one of the largest damns ever conjured - on the Brahmaputra which could potentially affect water flows to Assam in India and to Bangladesh.
60% of the brahmputra basin lies in india/bhutan where 6-7 tributaries of brahmputra river originates.More over there is no trearty between indo-china over brahmputra.As per IWT 80% of the water is reserved for pakistan and only 20% for india.Then also this dispute has been created out of thin air...
 
.
Back
Top Bottom