dc.description.abstract |
The Ganges River basin faces severe water challenges
related to a mismatch between supply and demand.
Although the basin has abundant surface water and groundwater
resources, the seasonal monsoon causes a mismatch
between supply and demand as well as flooding.Water availability
and flood potential is high during the 3–4 months
(June–September) of the monsoon season. Yet, the highest
demands occur during the 8–9 months (October–May) of the
non-monsoon period. Addressing this mismatch, which is
likely to increase with increasing demand, requires substantial
additional storage for both flood reduction and improvements
in water supply. Due to hydrogeological, environmental,
and social constraints, expansion of surface storage in the
Ganges River basin is problematic. A range of interventions
that focus more on the use of subsurface storage (SSS), and
on the acceleration of surface–subsurface water exchange,
has long been known as the GangesWater Machine (GWM).
The approach of theGWMfor providing such SSS is through
additional pumping and depleting of the groundwater resources
prior to the onset of the monsoon season and recharging
the SSS through monsoon surface runoff. An important
condition for creating such SSS is the degree of unmet water
demand. The paper shows that the potential unmet water
demand ranging from 59 to 124Bm3 year1 exists under two
different irrigation water use scenarios: (i) to increase irrigation
in the Rabi (November–March) and hot weather (April–
May) seasons in India, and the Aman (July–November) and
Boro (December–May) seasons in Bangladesh, to the entire
irrigable area, and (ii) to provide irrigation to Rabi and the
hot weather season in India and the Aman and Boro seasons
in Bangladesh to the entire cropped area. However, the potential
for realizing the unmet irrigation demand is high only
in 7 sub-basins in the northern and eastern parts, is moderate
to low in 11 sub-basins in the middle, and has little or
no potential in 4 sub-basins in the western part of the Ganges
basin. Overall, a revived GWM plan has the potential to meet
45–84Bm3 year1 of unmet water demand. |
en_US |