2009
DOI: 10.1007/s11269-009-9537-8
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Sustaining Urban Water Supplies in India: Increasing Role of Large Reservoirs

Abstract: Urban water demand is rapidly growing in India due to high growth in urban population and rapid industrialization. Meeting this demand is a big challenge for the urban planners in India. Incidentally, the large urban areas are experiencing faster growth in population, and most of them are in arid and semi arid regions, which are naturally water-scarce. As a result, water supplies from local water resources including aquifers are falling far short of the high and concentrated demands in most urban areas. Under … Show more

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Cited by 36 publications
(6 citation statements)
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“…But the social hydrology of cities is more complicated than that, because cities don't exist in isolation. Cities invariably import large quantities of water from surrounding watersheds or, in the Indian case, from longer distances as they grow bigger (Mukherjee, Shah, & Kumar, 2010). Not only do these withdrawals set up potential conflicts with water users in those watersheds (Narain, 2014), but they are also influenced by what changes take place in the watersheds upstream of the withdrawal point.…”
Section: Is Focusing On the Household Or The City Enough?mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…But the social hydrology of cities is more complicated than that, because cities don't exist in isolation. Cities invariably import large quantities of water from surrounding watersheds or, in the Indian case, from longer distances as they grow bigger (Mukherjee, Shah, & Kumar, 2010). Not only do these withdrawals set up potential conflicts with water users in those watersheds (Narain, 2014), but they are also influenced by what changes take place in the watersheds upstream of the withdrawal point.…”
Section: Is Focusing On the Household Or The City Enough?mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Groundwater aquifers getting depleted due to excessive pumping within small geographical areas are often reported from cities located in humid climates (Srinivasan, 2004). Many cities in India are running out of water, due to the permanent depletion of local groundwater and thus increasingly becoming dependent on external water sources to meet their drinking water demand (Mukherjee, Shah and Kumar, 2010). In this background, it is important to define the 'public' or the 'common' characteristics of the groundwater and develop proper institutional mechanism to regulate the groundwater extraction in the city, which is also crucial from the 'equity' in access to drinking water sources in the current model of water supply and governance.…”
Section: Tragedy Of Commonsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In the early stages of urban development, the provision of water is generally based on local groundwater resources and the diversion of water from lakes, ponds, rivers, and tanks (Lundqvist et al 2003, Mukherjee et al 2010. This was also the case in Hyderabad, which eventually had to look to long-distance transfer of water from beyond the city limits and boundaries because, as shown in Table 2, the local water resources were exhausted.…”
Section: The Technical Aspectmentioning
confidence: 99%