HomeNewsEnvironmentBorewells on the banks of Narmada are drying up, indicating concerning groundwater situation

Borewells on the banks of Narmada are drying up, indicating concerning groundwater situation

Borewells around the Narmada river in Madhya Pradesh are drying up which indicate groundwater depletion in the river basin.

April 02, 2022 / 12:32 IST
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The Narmada river flows through a gorge of marble rocks in Bhedaghat. Source: Wikimedia Commons
The Narmada river flows through a gorge of marble rocks in Bhedaghat. Source: Wikimedia Commons

Satyanarayan Patel, a 60-year-old farmer, hails from Bijanwada village of Narmadapuram (Hoshangabad) district in Madhya Pradesh. His house is located on the banks of the Pasa river, a tributary of Narmada river. Ironically, a water crisis looms in his village. Wells in Bijanwada are drying up one by one. Patel’s well also dried up two-three years ago.

“I was quite surprised the first time my well dried up. This had never happened before. The water of the Pasa river used to come from the well in the form of groundwater,” Patel said.

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Reminiscing, he continues, “We have spent our childhood on the banks of this river. We do not remember if the river was ever dry, but for the past few years, this river only has water for a month or two. As a consequence, our wells started drying up too. The bores that are 200-250 feet deep have also started drying up,” Patel told Mongabay-India.

Patel’s family relies on farming in Sohagpur’s Mahuakheda Khurd village, 20 km from his village in Bijanwada. Two years ago, the borewell installed in the field also stopped giving water. “The place comes within a five-kilometre radius of the Narmada river. Despite being so close to the river, the underground water is going down,” Patel told Mongabay-India.