You may login with either your assigned username or your e-mail address.
The password field is case sensitive.

Dug Wells

Groundwater scenario in major cities of India – A report by Central Ground Water Board

cover pageThis report by Central Ground Water Board presents the groundwater scenario in twenty eight major cities of the country based on a consolidation of the urban studies carried out by it. It covers varying groundwater scenarios in the country including the highly developed metros, the hilly region, the coastal cities, the cities tapping unconsolidated and hard rock aquifers. The report briefly describes the administrative set up, status of water supply and demand, groundwater scenario, feasibility of rainwater harvesting and groundwater development strategy.

It is an updated version of an earlier report on “Groundwater in urban environment in India” (2000). Since then, groundwater regime, urban demography and water demand have changed enormously. This report will form a scientific base for an in-depth understanding of urban groundwater system including aquifer geometry, water level behavior and groundwater quality. The possibility of artificial recharge to rejuvenate the urban aquifers has also been discussed.

Read More

AttachmentSize
Groundwater scenario in major cities of India – A report by Central Ground Water Board (2011)11.27 MB

Location

Agartala, TR, India
Latitude: 23.833349, Longitude: 91.278855

Urban Water and Sanitation Policy for Bihar – Experiences; Advice

From Ranvijay Kumar, Nidan, Patna

Posted 21 October 2010

I work with a Patna-based NGO called Nidan on Urban Water and Sanitation issues. We operate in 10 slums in Patna. According to the Census of 2001, the population of Patna Urban Agglomeration Area (PUAA), spread over nearly 135.79 sq. km., amounts to approximately 16.97 lakh people, of which 63.5 per cent resides in slums. Nearly 46 per cent of land occupied by slums belongs to the government. The civic services provided to them are very poor; housing is congested, there is little or no drainage and a lack of public lavatories, forcing them to defecate in the open. They have little access to government health services and depend on private practitioners.  More than half of these slums depend on the piped water supply of the Municipal Corporation and the rest use groundwater (tube wells, handpumps and dug wells).Read More

AttachmentSize
Urban Water and Sanitation Policy for Bihar – Experiences; Advice276.88 KB

Rapid investigations to assess impacts of aquifer recharge - Tumkur district (Karnataka) - A report by ACWADAM and BIRD-K

TumkurThis report by ACWADAM is a synopsis of the hydrogeological study carried out for BIRD-K in Pavagada, Sira and Bagepalli areas of Tumkur District, Karnataka. The study aimed at an impact analysis of recharge through borewells as well as suggesting new sites for the same.

The principle objectives of the study were:Read More

  •  Impact analysis of aquifer recharge through borewells done by BIRD-K in Pavagada and Sira Clusters
  • Suggest new sites for aquifer recharge through borewells in Bagepalli cluster.

The methodology used a background study of the area through images from Google Earth. A detailed geological fieldwork in the area was carried out. Various structural and hydrogeological measurements were made to map out the aquifer systems within the area. Water levels in borewells and dug wells were measured. The study area included seven watersheds and falls in two clusters namely Pavagada and Sira. Both these clusters are located in the Tumkur district of Karnataka.

AttachmentSize
Impact of aquifer recharge measures in Tumkur, Karnataka - BIRD-K and ACWADAM (2010)2.5 MB

Location

Tumkur, KA, India
Latitude: 13.338581, Longitude: 77.101219

Arsenic contamination of groundwater in Bihar and mitigation strategies - A research study

Arsenic contamination of groundwater of Bihar and mitigation strategies - Map 2009This presentation deals with the problem of arsenic contaminated aquifers in the Gangetic belt of Bihar and the failure of the state government in tackling the crisis and calls for the establishment of a centralized knowledge & research hub with an understanding of the regional peculiarities to mitigate the crisis.Read More

It traces the origin of arsenic crisis to the switch from use of surface water to groundwater. The health impacts of arsenic poisoning and the factors that aggravate arsenicosis are explained. A total of sixteen districts (fifty-seven blocks) in Bihar are affected by high levels of arsenic in groundwater, in trivalent form, which is a more toxic form of arsenic.

AttachmentSize
Arsenic Contamination in Groundwater of Bihar by Ashok Ghosh (2009)7.25 MB

Location

Bhojpur, BR, India
Latitude: 25.583798, Longitude: 84.130321

Dug well recharge scheme (2007-08 to 2009-10) - Revised guidelines with amendments to the scheme by the Central Ground Water Board

The State sector scheme on artificial recharge to groundwater through dug-wells is under implementation over the first three years of the (current) XI Plan Period (2007-12), in 1180 over-exploited, critical and semi-critical blocks/ talukas/ mandals in seven states of the hard-rock peninsular region of India, namely Andhra Pradesh, Maharashtra, Karnataka, Rajasthan, Tamil Nadu, Gujarat and Madhya Pradesh. The target beneficiary of the scheme are farmers who have privately owned wells, in their agricultural land.Read More

AttachmentSize
Artificial recharge to groundwater scheme by MoWR & CGWB (2007-08 to 2009-10)368.92 KB
Revised guidelines with amendments for artificial recharge to groundwater scheme by CGWB (2009-10)4.1 MB

Artificial recharge of groundwater - A manual - Ministry of Water Resources

This manual by the Ministry of Water Resources, Government of India provides the background on the global and Indian water scenario and the emerging challenges related to groundwater depletion and pollution in the country and provides the  details on the concept, the prerequisites and the mechanism of artificial recharge of groundwater. Read More

AttachmentSize
Manual on Artificial Recharge of Groundwater - Ministry of Water Resources (MoWR) (GOI) (2007)5.31 MB
Syndicate content

Arghyam

6.22-2011.07.01-06