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Yamuna

River Yamuna- Dying by default or by design: A public lecture on river Yamuna

Source: Peace Institute Charitable Trust

This presentation is part of a lecture organised by Toxics Link as part of the Yamuna Jiye Abhiyaan and held at the India International centre in September 2007. It aims to inform, enlighten and suggest solutions to bring back the river Yamuna to a healthy and resilient state. slide showing factories on the banks of the Yamuna

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Location

delhi, , India
Latitude: 28.635308, Longitude: 77.224960

Performance audit of water pollution in India – A report by the Comptroller and Auditor General of India

RiversThis report of the Comptroller and Auditor General of India (CAG) deals with the results of the performance audit of water pollution in India for the year ended March 2011. The issue was examined by CAG because various stakeholders working in the field of environment flagged water pollution as the most important environmental issue that concerns us. 

The audit was conducted through document analysis, collection of responses to questionnaires, physical collection and testing of samples. The results of audit, both at the Central level and the State level, were taken into account for arriving at audit conclusions.

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Performance audit of water pollution in India – A report by the Comptroller and Auditor General of India (2011)7.35 MB

Location

Shivpuri, MP, India
Latitude: 25.423290, Longitude: 77.653633

Water quality hot-spots in rivers of India – A report by Central Water Commission

River Water QualityThis report by the Central Water Commission (CWC) attempts to provide the water quality scenario of our rivers and evolve a methodology for identifying hot spots in Indian rivers. The water quality data is based on the average values observed during the last ten years (2001-2011) at 371 monitoring stations of CWC on almost all major, medium and minor rivers in India. In respect of Dissolved Oxygen and Biochemical Oxygen Demand, the Central Pollution Control Board's classification has been considered for evaluating the hot spot in the rivers.

The physical and chemical quality of river water is important in deciding its suitability for drinking purposes. As such the suitability of river water for potable uses with regard to its chemical quality has to be deciphered and defined on the basis of the some vital characteristics of the water. Bureau of Indian Standards (BIS) vide its document IS: 10500:1991, edition 2.2 (2003‐09) has recommended the quality standards for drinking water and these have been used for finding the suitability of river water. On this basis of classification, the natural river water of India has been categorized as desirable, permissible and unfit for human consumption.

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Water quality hot-spots in rivers of India – A report by Central Water Commission (2011)3.94 MB

Location

Erode, TN, India
Latitude: 11.342235, Longitude: 77.727477

Polluted river stretches in India: Criteria and status - A report by Central Pollution Control Board

This brief report by the Central Pollution Control Board (CPCB) presents an analysis of the monitoring of the water quality in India under the National Water Quality Monitoring Programme. The water quality data for the years 2002-2008 has been analysed and monitoring locations exceeding the water quality criteria have been identified as polluted locations with respect to risk.

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Polluted river stretches in India: Criteria and status - A report by Central Pollution Control Board (2011)194.78 KB

Location

Ahmedabad, GJ, India
Latitude: 23.039568, Longitude: 72.566005

Geospatial technology for groundwater management – An article in Geospatial World

WellThis article by Sangeeta Deogawanka in the Geospatial World deals with the issues related to the use of geospatial technology for groundwater management in the country. Core agencies of the government dealing with the management and development of groundwater resources identify and map hotspots of salinity, chloride, fluoride, arsenic, iron and nitrate in groundwater. However, most online information is of a generic nature, lacking detailed database or methodology used. On the whole a picture evolves of national bodies looking into the groundwater policy and potential zoning on a hegemonic model, with regional state-level groundwater departments.

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Location

Lucknow, UP, India
Latitude: 26.846511, Longitude: 80.946683

Down the drain – Exploring traditional water systems - A film by Tarun Jayaram

 

Where does our water come from? Where does it go? Can the Yamuna ever be a river again? 

These are some of the questions which led Tarun Jayaram, the film-maker to explore traditional water systems in the country. From the documentary’s opening moments, the director engages us with a beautifully shot array of footages ranging from pilgrims taking a holy dip of Ganges to beautiful baolis and tankas of Rajasthan to the ancient town of Hampi in Karnataka, while establishing how rivers have been an integral part of Indian culture and how its rich tradition of harvesting rainwater needs to be re-established to deal with the present day water crisis. Over the refreshing images and soothing audio, it advocates the need for community participation in rejuvenating the traditional methods of rainwater harvesting. 

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Location

Varanasi, UP, India
Latitude: 25.317645, Longitude: 82.973914

Snow and glaciers of the Himalayas – A study by Indian Space Research Organisation

Cover PageThese reports present the findings of a study on “Snow and Glacier Studies” taken up by the Space Applications Centre, Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) and executed in collaboration with fourteen research organizations and academic institutions of the country, at the behest of the Ministry of Environment and Forests.

Snow cover for the entire Indian Himalaya has been monitored for four consecutive years from 2004-05 to 2007-08. Himalayan mountains contain important natural resources of frozen fresh water in the form of snow and glaciers. These glaciers are unique as they are located in tropics, high altitude regions, predominantly valley type and many are covered with debris.

The great northern plains of India sustain on the perennial melt of snow and glaciers meeting the water requirements of agriculture, industries, domestic sector even in the months of summer when large tracts of the country go dry. Therefore, it is important to monitor and assess the state of snow and glaciers and to know the sustainability of glaciers in view of changing global scenarios of climate and water security of the nation. Any information pertaining to Himalayan glaciers is normally difficult to be obtained by conventional means due to its harsh weather and rugged terrains.

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Snow and Glaciers of the Himalayas - Discussion Paper I - ISRO-SAC (2011)40.21 MB
Snow and Glaciers of the Himalayas - Discussion Paper II - ISRO-SAC (2011)45.39 MB

Location

Manali, HP, India
Latitude: 32.240927, Longitude: 77.191650

A perspective of watershed development in the central Himalayan state of Uttarakhand – A paper by Himmotthan Pariyojana

This paper by Malavika Chauhan of Himmotthan Pariyojana in the International Journal of Ecology and Environmental Sciences discusses the evolution of watershed development projects and their implementation in the central Himalayan state of Uttarakhand. It traces the historical growth of thinking on watershed in the region, and highlights issues and influences. Impacts and benefits are discussed in relation to sustainability. The review shows that success in these projects is usually isolated, mostly seen in small micro-watersheds with naturally good water harvesting conditions.

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A perspective of watershed development in the central Himalayan state of Uttarakhand – A paper by Himmotthan Pariyojana (2010)319.49 KB

Location

Uttarkashi, UL, India
Latitude: 30.733299, Longitude: 78.439903

Soil respiration under different forest species in the riparian buffer of the semi-arid region of northwest India – A paper in Current Science

This paper in Current Science deals with soil respiration under different forest species in the riparian buffer of the semi-arid region of North West India. Soil respiration is a major process affecting the global carbon cycle and nutrient flux in the terrestrial ecosystem. It is the major pathway for exchange of gases from soil to atmosphere, influencing atmospheric temperature and ultimately contributing to global warming. Soil carbon is returned from the soil to the atmosphere through soil respiration, which represents one of the largest fluxes in the terrestrial C cycle1–3. The main sources of terrestrial flux of CO2 are decomposing soil organic matter, respiration from heterotrophic soil organisms and autotrophic live root respiration.

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Soil respiration under different forest species in the riparian buffer of the semi-arid region of northwest India – A paper in Current Science (2011)444.86 KB

Location

Agra, UP, India
Latitude: 27.178057, Longitude: 78.007789

Proceedings of the second international symposium on the management of large rivers for fisheries by FAO and Mekong River Commission

The second international symposium on the management of large rivers for fisheries was held by the Food and Agriculture Organisation of the United Nations (FAO) and Mekong River Commission on 11 - 14 February 2003 in Phnom Penh, Kingdom of Cambodia. It had three primary objectives: (a) To provide a forum to review and synthesise the latest information on large rivers; (b) To raise the political, public and scientific awareness of the importance of river systems, the living aquatic resources they support and the people that depend on them; and (c) To contribute to better management, conservation and restoration of the living aquatic resources of large rivers.

The symposium was organised in six sessions:

Session 1: Status of rivers
Session 2: Value of river fisheries
Session 3: Fisheries ecology and conservation
Session 4: Management of river fisheries
Session 5: Statistics and information
Session 6: Synthesis

Over 220 river scientists and managers from around the world attended the symposium. Contributed papers represented 96 rivers from 61 river basins from all continents and climatic zones. It came up with the following recommendations for action -

  • Improve the valuation of living river resources in order to contribute to equitable and sustainable management of fishery resources and properly place the fishery in the context of the other uses of rivers.
  • Direct greater effort to better understanding the social and economic aspects of fisheries to support policy and management priorities; livelihood approaches will be a valuable tool.
  • Communicate and engage with environment and water resources managers within the context of multi-use of water in order to accurately assess impacts and to sustain the benefits of river fisheries in an equitable manner.
  • Develop processes that facilitate the users and beneficiaries of the fishery resource to assume greater control of its management.
  • Establish appropriate mechanisms at national and basin level to enable negotiation for the needs of communities dependent upon the living aquatic resources. In particular further regulations need to be elaborated to protect general ecosystem function and provide for environmental flows.
  • Use instruments such as the freshwater eco-regions approach, the Ramsar Convention and the guidelines for water allocation suggested by the World Commission on Dams, to enhance planning for conservation and sustainable use of river habitats.
  • Incorporate ecological flow requirements of river-floodplain systems into development plans and impact assessments that affect river flows, taking into account the seasonality of the system and the environmental cues needed by the fish for migration and reproduction.
  • Rehabilitate degraded ecosystems wherever possible. Prioritize schemes that ensure connectivity and protection of critical habitats.

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Proceedings of the second international symposium on the management of large rivers for fisheries by FAO and Mekong River Commission - Volume I (2003)9.57 MB
Proceedings of the second international symposium on the management of large rivers for fisheries by FAO and Mekong River Commission - Volume II (2003)8.08 MB

Location

Farakka, WB, India
Latitude: 24.797155, Longitude: 87.914495

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