HomeNewsOpinionIndia’s water crisis isn’t just about scarcity – it’s also about storage and delivery

India’s water crisis isn’t just about scarcity – it’s also about storage and delivery

India’s water crisis goes beyond scarcity, it’s a challenge of storage, delivery, and access to safe water. Holistic infrastructure, innovation, and awareness are essential for long-term water security and resilience

May 19, 2025 / 14:38 IST
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India Water crisi
India’s water demand is projected to be twice the available supply, and the water crisis could lead to a potential loss of 6% to GDP by 2030.

By Yashovardhan Agarwal

India has long grappled with water scarcity, but the crisis is deepening. As per NITI Aayog’s Composite Water Management Index, India faces extreme water stress — by 2030, India’s water demand is projected to be twice the available supply, and the water crisis could lead to a potential loss of 6% to GDP by 2030. Government data suggests per capita water availability has plunged from 1816 cubic meters in 2001 to 1486 cubic meters in 2021 and projected to plummet below 1,341 cubic meters today — placing India perilously close to being classified as “water stressed”.

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India’s water crisis is typically discussed in the context of scarcity — declining groundwater tables, dried-up reservoirs, and erratic monsoons. But what often slips through the cracks is this: even in places where water exists, it doesn’t always reach people in a secure, safe, or timely manner. The problem isn’t just availability — it is also access to safe water.

From floods during heavy rains to acute shortages during summer, India swings between extremes. This paradox points to a deeper structural flaw: our inability to store, transport, and distribute water efficiently. While India receives around 3,070 billion cubic meters (BCM) (2024 data) of rainfall annually, less than a fifth of it is effectively stored or reused. Most of it runs off, wasted, while communities brace for the next dry spell.