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Learning liquid lessons
That hackneyed phrase, water, water everywhere,
but not a drop to drink, never did ring more true. The Okhamandal
region of Jamnagar district, located on the tip of the Saurashtra
peninsula, has the dubious distinction of being a drought-prone
region despite being surrounded by water on three sides.
Until recently, the villagers of Poshitra, one of the villages
in this subdistrict, had no option but to cultivate crops
like bajra, jowar, etc that relied solely on rainwater. They
also faced a severe drinking water crisis that began every
February and lasted until the onset of the monsoon. The underground
water here was brackish beyond a depth of 30 feet. The situation
in Tupni village differed only in some particulars. Here,
the land was rocky and the water table extremely deep, making
the availability of water for irrigation difficult.
Had these and other such villages waited for government assistance,
they would probably still be waiting. Fortunately for them,
their plight caught the attention of Tata Chemicals, which
has its chemicals complex in nearby Mithapur. The company
has a history of working in the field of sustainable development
and has come to the aid of local communities in times of natural
disasters. More importantly, from the point of view of water,
Mithapur and its adjoining township were the laboratories
where Tata Chemicals perfected its water solutions, from reuse
and recycling to substitution with seawater.
The task of stemming the damage and saving the situation
for the villagers was allocated to the Tata Chemicals Society
for Rural Development (TCSRD), set up by the company in 1980
to help improve the lives of communities living in and around
Okhamandal. Relief and welfare work undertaken by TCSRD, although
very useful, offered only temporary relief. Something more
needed to be done to enable the villages to become as self-reliant
as possible. Sustainable development alone offered the promise
of a lasting solution.
TCSRDs strategy for the villages of Okhamandal took
shape around a comprehensive water management and watershed
development project. The objectives were straightforward:
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To improve the economic condition of villagers by improving
water availability. |
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To improve the quality and availability of underground
water. |
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To increase irrigated land area. |
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To build the capacities of local people. |
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To promote suitable low-water using crops and cropping
techniques. |
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To improve the green cover of the villages and promote
indigenous species. |
The plan was to conserve rainwater by building check dams,
bunds, percolation tanks, farm ponds and the like. TCSRD rightly
figured that sustainable cultivation would ensure employment
to farmers for the greater part of the year, insulating them
from the vagaries of the monsoon and the demands of the agricultural
cycle. Farmers would be able to employ landless labourers
to work on their land, thereby generating additional employment.
As a result, the standard of living of the entire village
would inevitably improve.
TCSRD, in collaboration with the state governments
District Rural Development Agency, acted as the implementing
agency for the project in various villages. As part of the
project, the society hired the services of the Indian Resource
Information and Management Technology, which did hydrology
studies, tested soil conditions and mapped the areas where
conditions were appropriate for water harvesting.
TCSRD took up the construction of water-harvesting structures
in a total of 27 villages. The initiatives on this front included
well recharging, deepening and de-silting of ponds and wells,
and the construction or repair of check dams. The benefits
were palpable: the storage capacity in the villages increased
significantly to touch 150 million cubic feet of water. Once
the primary aim of water availability was ensured, downstream
projects targeting land improvement, animal husbandry and
afforestation, among other programmes, were taken up.
It wasnt long before the project began to make a difference
to the lives of the people. Thus far, 159 medium and 1,216
small structures, including wells and plantations, have been
completed under the programme. TCSRD found, to no real surprise,
that the villagers were not only prepared to contribute a
percentage of the total project expenditure, but also willing
to pay for the services they received. Village committees
facilitate the distribution, use and payment mechanism for
the water. Such collections have enabled the villagers to
defray 70-80 per cent of the expenses of constructing newer
dams.
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The direct economic gain per year from the project has been
Rs2-2.5 crore. Numbers such as these mean that the villagers
have greater access to district authorities and banks. The
quantity as well as the quality of water now available to
the villages involved in the project has improved substantially.
The
supplementary gains have been enormous: capacity building
has led to the creation of new assets, increased awareness
among the villagers and led to a sense of unity. The self-confidence
thus brewed has seen the establishment of more than 85 self-help
groups engaged in micro-finance activities.
What is most heartening about the project is that the management
and ownership of all the water structures rests with the villagers,
who are simultaneously owners, custodians and beneficiaries.
TCSRD is clear about involving the villagers at every step
of the process, since it is they who will gain from the resultant
development. The broad idea is to reduce the dependence of
the villagers on society and encourage them to take their
own decisions.
Towards this end, TCSRD had to strive to win the confidence
of the villagers. This was done through meetings and discussions
with them and through the execution of what is known as participatory
rural appraisals (PRAs), which is a methodology for
getting feedback from villagers. After a PRA is conducted,
a village watershed committee is formed, comprising representatives
from a cross-section of the population. This committee has
to ensure that work on various waterharvesting structures
and related jobs runs smoothly.
Once the implementation process has been completed, the villagers,
following a minimal training period, take over the task of
managing the structure. The training helps them to think in
terms of the communitys welfare and the sustainability
of the project. For example, there is always a risk that the
availability of good water may encourage people to move towards
the cultivation of crops that require huge amounts of water.
The third phase of the project tackles issues of this nature.
The goal here is to optimise the use of water and make appropriate
agricultural interventions.
Tata Chemicals realises that the successful completion of
this project could spell good news for areas with water problems
similar to Okhamandals. It has shown what can be achieved
through a combination of water-management expertise and people
involvement at the village level
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