Karnataka Braces for Water Stress as Monsoon Deficit Looms

Karnataka Chief Minister Siddaramaiah has warned of an expected monsoon deficit in most districts and directed officials to brace for potential water stress. He held a high-level review meeting, identifying 213 taluks and over 2,400 gram panchayats as potentially vulnerable to drinking water shortages this summer. The CM emphasized accountability, prioritizing drinking water over irrigation, and using tankers only as a last resort. Currently, 598 gram panchayats are facing issues, with water being supplied via tankers and hired private borewells.

Key Points: Karnataka Monsoon Deficit: CM Siddaramaiah Flags Water Stress

  • Monsoon deficit forecast for most districts
  • 213 taluks identified as vulnerable
  • 27 urban bodies currently face water shortage
  • Drinking water priority over irrigation
3 min read

Siddaramaiah flags likely monsoon deficit, asks officials to brace for water stress

Karnataka CM Siddaramaiah warns of monsoon deficit, directs officials to prevent drinking water shortage. Review of 213 taluks, tanker use, and reservoir levels.

"Deputy Commissioners will be held accountable if there is any shortage of drinking water. - Siddaramaiah"

Bengaluru, April 16

Karnataka Chief Minister Siddaramaiah on Thursday said a monsoon deficit is expected in most districts of the state, barring five, and directed Deputy Commissioners to take precautionary measures to ensure there is no shortage of drinking water.

He was speaking at a meeting held under his chairmanship at the Vidhana Soudha, attended by district in-charge ministers, Deputy Commissioners, and Chief Executive Officers of Zilla Panchayats, to review drinking water supply in rural and urban areas.

The India Meteorological Department (IMD) has forecast below-normal rainfall during the monsoon this year. While rainfall is expected to be normal in August, it is likely to be below normal in September.

The Chief Minister said Deputy Commissioners will be held accountable if there is any shortage of drinking water. He directed the Revenue, Panchayat Raj, and Urban Development departments to work in coordination.

He noted that during April-June, most districts in North Interior Karnataka are likely to experience more heatwave days than usual. He instructed officials to take necessary precautionary measures and to treat weather forecasts with due seriousness.

The Chief Minister directed officials to provide shade and drinking water facilities for the public. He assured that there is no shortage of funds to ensure drinking water supply and said the Finance Department has already been instructed to release the necessary funds based on reports from Deputy Commissioners.

A total of 213 taluks and 2,410 gram panchayats have been identified as potentially facing drinking water shortages during the summer. Currently, 598 gram panchayats across 114 taluks are facing drinking water issues. Water is being supplied to 137 villages through 129 tankers, and 585 private borewells have been hired to supply water to 515 villages.

The meeting was informed that drinking water shortages may arise in 147 gram panchayats in Kalaburagi district, 114 in Bagalkote, 127 in Belagavi, 115 in Chikkamagaluru, 138 in Haveri, 130 in Mandya, 141 in Tumakuru, and 125 in Karwar.

At present, 27 urban local bodies are facing drinking water shortages, while 95 more have been identified as vulnerable. Water is being supplied to 145 wards through 57 tankers, and 22 borewells have been hired.

The Chief Minister said tanker supply should be used only in unavoidable circumstances and that priority should be given to hiring private borewells. If required, new borewells may be drilled.

Out of the total capacity of 14 major reservoirs in the state, 321.93 TMC of water is currently available, which is 36 per cent of the total capacity. During the same period last year, 330.35 TMC was available. At present, there is sufficient water in reservoirs for drinking purposes.

As the monsoon may be delayed, the Chief Minister directed officials to ensure sufficient water availability in reservoirs for drinking purposes until mid-July.

He stressed that drinking water supply should be given priority over irrigation and directed officials to identify and repair leakages in reservoirs.

- IANS

Share this article:

Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
Every year it's the same story in North Interior Karnataka. Heatwaves and water stress. When will we see long-term solutions like better watershed management and reviving traditional water bodies instead of just hiring tankers and borewells? 🤔
D
David E
As someone living in Bengaluru, I appreciate the transparency. The reservoir levels (36%) are a concern, but glad drinking water is prioritized. Citizens also need to do their part - reduce wastage, harvest rainwater. It's a collective effort.
S
Sneha F
Holding Deputy Commissioners accountable is a strong move. But will it actually happen? Often these directives remain on paper. Hope there's real monitoring. The people in those 598 gram panchayats need relief now, not just promises.
A
Aman W
The focus on repairing leakages is crucial! So much water is lost in our aging pipelines. While immediate measures are needed, we must invest heavily in fixing the distribution infrastructure. Jai Karnataka! 💧
K
Kavitha C
Respectfully, the article mentions "no shortage of funds". That's good, but in my village, the problem is never funds, it's timely execution and last-mile delivery. Hope the officials on the ground are as serious as the CM in Vidhana Soudha.

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

Leave a Comment

Minimum 50 characters 0/50