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Measures to Improve Water Storage in India | UPSC Notes

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Measures to Improve Water Storage in India

Water storage is central to India’s water security because the country receives most of its rainfall within a short monsoon period, while the demand for water continues throughout the year. Rapid population growth, expanding agriculture, urbanisation, industrialisation and climate variability have increased pressure on available water resources. At the same time, traditional water bodies have declined, groundwater levels are falling and surface runoff is often wasted due to inadequate storage systems. Therefore, improving water storage is essential not only for irrigation and drinking water supply, but also for drought mitigation, groundwater recharge, flood control and climate resilience

Measures

  • Reviving and Expanding Surface Water Storage 
    • Large Reservoir Augmentation 
      • Desiltation of existing reservoirs — Bhakra, Hirakud, Nagarjunasagar losing storage capacity to siltation annually
      • Install silt traps and check dams upstream to reduce sediment load entering reservoirs
      • Undertake periodic hydrographic surveys — monitor storage loss and plan remediation
      • Raise dam heights where structurally feasible — increase storage without new submergence
    • Medium and Minor Irrigation Structures 
      • Rehabilitate and desilt tanks, ponds, and minor reservoirs — thousands are defunct across peninsular India 
      • Promote check dams and nala bunds — small structures that store runoff and recharge groundwater simultaneously 
  • Groundwater Recharge and Managed Aquifer Recharge (MAR) 
    • Artificial Recharge Structures 
      • Construct percolation tanks — store surface runoff and allow it to percolate into aquifers
      • Develop recharge shafts and injection wells — directly replenish deep aquifers
      • Build subsurface dykes — underground barriers that slow groundwater flow and raise local water table
      • Promote check dams in hard rock areas — store water and recharge fractured aquifer systems
      • Construct spreading basins — shallow depressions where water spreads and infiltrates
    • Urban and Peri-Urban Recharge 
      • Mandate Rainwater Harvesting (RWH) in all buildings — recharge through rooftop collection
      • Revive urban water bodies — lakes, ponds, and tanks as recharge zones
      • Develop urban green infrastructure — permeable pavements, recharge parks, green roofs

  • Farm-Level Water Storage 
    • Farm Ponds 
      • Promote farm ponds — small on-farm storage structures capturing rainwater and runoff 
      • Line farm ponds with HDPE or polythene sheets — prevent seepage losses 
    • Rooftop Rainwater Harvesting 
      • Mandate rooftop RWH for all farm buildings — store water for domestic and agricultural use 
    • Community Water Storage 
      • Develop village-level community ponds — collective storage for multiple farmers 
      • Revive traditional community water bodies — johads in Rajasthan 
  • Reviving Traditional Water Conservation Systems 
    • India has a rich heritage of indigenous water storage systems — many abandoned but highly effective 
    • Traditional systems such as tanks, ponds, johads, baolis, ahars-pynes, kunds and temple tanks should be revived.
    • These systems are locally suitable, low-cost and help store rainwater for agriculture, livestock and domestic use.
      • Document, restore, and integrate traditional systems into modern water management plans 
  • Soil Moisture Conservation as Indirect Storage 
    • Mulching — crop residue, plastic, or organic mulch reduces evaporation from soil surface
    • Conservation tillage and zero-till — preserve soil moisture between rains
    • Contour bunding and terracing — slow runoff on slopes, increase infiltration time
    • Vegetative barriers — grass strips along contours reduce runoff velocity
    • Healthy soils with high organic matter hold significantly more water — soil as a storage medium
    • Promote cover crops between seasons — protect soil moisture and structure
  • Improving Storage Efficiency of Existing Infrastructure 
    • Desilt and rehabilitate existing tanks, ponds, and reservoirs — restore lost storage capacity
    • Line leaking canals — prevent seepage losses that waste stored water
    • Install modern gate mechanisms — prevent uncontrolled releases from reservoirs
    • Develop real-time reservoir operation systems — optimize releases based on demand and inflow forecasts
  • Protect wetlands and floodplains
    • Wetlands, lakes, marshes and floodplains act as natural water storage systems.
    • Encroachment, pollution and construction in these areas should be controlled because they help in groundwater recharge, flood moderation and maintaining river flows.
  • Watershed Development as Storage Strategy 
    • Treat entire watersheds — not just individual structures — for maximum water retention
    • Ridge-to-valley treatment — start conservation from hilltops, work downward
    • Integrate afforestation, grassland restoration, and water harvesting at watershed scale
    • Develop watershed storage cascades — series of check dams, percolation tanks, and farm ponds
    • Decentralized watershed storage — many small structures more effective than few large ones

Improving water storage under a depleting scenario requires a paradigm shift — from dependence on large centralized infrastructure to a mosaic of decentralized, community-managed, and ecologically sensitive storage solutions. Every raindrop must be captured, every aquifer recharged, every traditional system revived, and every drop used with maximum efficiency. Water storage is no longer merely an engineering challenge — it is a survival imperative for Indian agriculture. 

“In a water-scarce future, the nation that stores wisely will farm successfully. Every drop saved today is a harvest secured tomorrow.”

Sample Mains Questions

Q1. Why is improving water storage important for India’s agricultural sustainability?
(150 words, 10 marks)

Q2. Discuss the role of traditional water conservation systems in improving water storage in India.
(150 words, 10 marks)

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