Showing posts with label WATER. Show all posts
Showing posts with label WATER. Show all posts

Monday, March 20, 2017

INDUS WATER TREATY : Indus water commission meet in Pakistan: Top developments

SOURCE
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/india/indus-water-commission-meet-in-pakistan-top-developments/articleshow/57725548.cms





  1. Indus water commission meet in Pakistan: Top developments

    TIMESOFINDIA.COM 

     Mar 20, 2017
    The two-day meeting of Permanent Indus Commission (PIC), on Monday, will discuss the design aspects of Pakal Dul, Lower Kalnai and Miyar hydroelectric plants being constructed by New Delhi and other water related matters between Pakistan and India.
  2. MEET AFTER TWO YEARS
    The 113th Meeting of Permanent Indus Commission (PIC) is being held on March 20-21 after a gap of almost two years - last such meeting took place in May 2015 in New Delhi.
  3. INDIAN DELEGATION IN PAKISTAN
    On Sunday, a 10-member Indian delegation arrived to take part in the meeting of the Permanent Indus Commission (PIC) beginning today in the Pakistani capital. The delegation, which will take part in the two-day meeting, is led by India's Indus Water Commissioner P K Saxena and comprises of Ministry of External Affairs officials and technical experts. Senior Pakistani officials and Indian High Commission officials greeted the delegation at the Wagah border.
  4. ACCESS DENIED
    Media personnel gathered at the Wagah border were not given access to the delegation. The delegation later left for Islamabad by road amid high security. Ahead of the visit, an Indian government source told PTI that India is "always open" to discuss and resolve concerns Pakistan has over its projects under the Indus Waters Treaty (IWT) bilaterally.
  5. NO COMPROMISE
    The source, however, reiterated that there will be "no compromise" on India exploiting its due rights under the 57-year-old pact. However, the agenda for the meeting, taking place nearly six months after India decided to suspend talks on the pact in the wake of the Uri terror attack by Pakistan-based outfits, is yet to be finalised. Asked whether the delay in reaching consensus over the agenda for the meeting will leave little time to resolve issues, the source replied in negative.


    "We always go into such meetings with optimistic mindset. In the past too, there had been delays in finalising agenda for the meeting, yet solutions were achieved," the source added.
  6. PAKISTAN'S OBJECTIONS
    Pakistan had raised objections over designs of 240 MW Uri-II and 44 MW Chutak projects, built in Baramulla and Kargil districts of Jammu and Kashmir respectively, saying these will deprive it of its water share under the pact
  7. THE CONCERN OVER DESIGN
    However, at a meeting held in May 2010, the neighbouring country withdrew objections after the Indian side provided details of the Chutak projects. Similarly, Pakistan has been flagging concern over designs of India's five other hydroelectricity projects -- Pakal Dul (1000 MW), Ratle (850 MW), Kishanganga (330 MW), Miyar (120 MW) and Lower Kalnai (48 MW) - being built or planned in the Indus river basin, contending these violate the treaty. It had approached the World Bank, the mediator between the two countries of the 57-year-old water distribution treaty, in August last year raising issues over Kishanganga and Ratle projects in Jammu and Kashmir.
  8. THE INDIAN PROJECTS
    While there is no clarity yet whether issues relating to these two projects will figure during the meet as they are before the Bank, the source said Pakal Dul, Miyar and Lower Kalnai may be discussed. According to Pakistan, designs of the three projects are not in line with the treaty, whereas India has maintained otherwise. The three projects, being built on tributaries of Chenab river, are in the pre-construction/under-construction stages.
  9. THE ESTIMATED COST OF PROJECTS
    Pakal Dul and Lower Kalnai are being built in Jammu and Kashmir at a cost of Rs 7,464 crore (November 2008 price level) and Rs 396 crore respectively. Miyar hydroelectricity project, located in Himachal Pradesh's Lahaul Spiti district, is estimated to cost Rs 1,125 crore. The Commission, which has officials from both the countries as its members, was set up under the treaty to discuss and resolve issues relating to its implementation.
  10. MANDATORY MEET
    It is mandatory for the Commission to meet at least once in a fiscal, alternately in India and Pakistan. The PIC had last met in May 2015. India has already downplayed its participation in the meeting, saying it does not amount to "resumption" of government-level Indo-Pak talks. Declaring that "blood and water cannot flow together," Prime Minister Narendra Modi had held a meeting in September to review the treaty in the backdrop of the terror strikes, including the Uri attack.


    After that meeting, officials had announced that the government has decided to suspend further talks and increase the utilisation of rivers flowing through J&K to fully exercise India's rights under the pact

Friday, March 17, 2017

INDUS WATER TREATY :How Politics Dictated Indus Waters Treaty From First to Last

SOURCE:
https://thewire.in/111893/how-politics-dictated-indus-waters-treaty-from-first-to-last/



How Politics Dictated Indus Waters Treaty                   From First to  Last 

                                 BY 

                 






Water sharing between India and Pakistan was less about economics or ecology but far more about politics, argues the author of Indus Divided: India, Pakistan and the River Basin Dispute.




A tributary of the Indus flows through Sarbal, Kashmir. Credit: Sandeep Pachetan/Flickr, CC BY-NC-ND 2.0


Thursday, August 11, 2016

WATER : FIRST WATER ATLAS OF THE HIMALAYAS LAUNCHED

SOURCE:
https://www.thethirdpole.net/2015/12/11/first-water-atlas-of-the-himalayas-launched-in-paris/


                                
                                                  PROJECT  SARASWATI

                                     WATER

                    

                  FIRST WATER ATLAS 

                               OF THE


              HIMALAYAS LAUNCHED

                                           By

                             Ramesh Bhushal



December 11, 2015




                             Produced by

 a global consortium of mountain research organisations, the altas illustrates changing climate and water flow in the region’s major river basins














The new atlas, released  at the UN climate summit, is based on years of data from five of the ten main river basins in the Himalayas: the Brahmaputra, Ganges, Indus, Mekong and Salween. It uses maps and infographics to show how the region’s climate is changing now and into the future, with severe consequences for populations, both local and downstream

.
HKH_Physical_Map



“Mountains are beautiful but we shouldn’t forget that they are the most fragile landmass on earth and need more care,”
 said David Molden, director general of the Kathmandu based International Center for Integrated Mountain Development (ICIMOD).


The Hindu Kush- Himalayas are known as the water tower of Asia. Snow, glaciers and rainfall from the mountains feed the ten largest river systems in Asia. Together these rivers support the drinking water, irrigation, energy, industry and sanitation needs of 1.3 billion people living in the mountains and downstream.

“This atlas is an initiative to simplify complex scientific information generated for decades and allows policymakers to understand the real picture of threats due to climate change,” said Björn Alfthan, project manager of the Polar and Cryosphere Division at GRID-Arendal, Norway.




Hydrological_Characteristics_RiverBasins


Data gaps

The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change’s fourth assessment report called the region a “white spot” because of the lack of information and experts say the situation has not improved much. “Data gaps in the Hindu Kush Himalayas are still very large and most of the analyses are based on modelled data. Countries should come together to share data and undertake more rigorous,” added Molden.


The atlas recommends the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change should initiate a comprehensive assessment of the Himalayan glaciers and river flow to fill the remaining gaps.


“Although the total amount of water flowing within some of Asia’s biggest rivers such as the Ganges, Brahmaputra and Indus is not expected to decrease until 2050, we can expect higher variability and more floods and droughts,” the report concluded.


Projected_glacial_area_change


The report was jointly produced by International Centre for Integrated Mountain Development (ICIMOD)GRID-Arendal and the Centre for International Climate and Environmental Research-Oslo (CICERO).




Major findings:
  • Temperatures across the mountainous Hindu Kush Himalayan region will increase by about 1–2°C (in some places by up to 4–5°C) by 2050.
  • Glaciers will continue to suffer substantial ice loss, with the main loss in the Indus basin.
  • Precipitation will change with the monsoon expected to become longer and more erratic.
  • Extreme rainfall events are becoming less frequent, but more violent and are likely to increase in intensity.
  • Communities living immediately downstream from glaciers are the most vulnerable to glacial changes.
  • Despite overall greater river flow projected, higher variability in river flows and more water in pre-monsoon months are expected, which will lead to a higher incidence of unexpected floods and droughts, greatly impacting on the livelihood security and agriculture of river-dependent people.
  • Changes in temperature and precipitation will have serious and far-reaching consequences for climate-dependent sectors, such as agriculture, water resources and health.


  • Natural_disasters_Asia


                                  CLICK

                                        &
                

                        Read the full report


                                                                       here.