Connect with us

TOP STORIES

Dry springs and rivers: Experts sound alarm on diminishing water resources | KNO

Urge immediate, comprehensive strategies to safeguard region’s future

Published

on

kno news

Srinagar, Feb 19 (KNO): Experts and environmental science specialists have highlighted the ongoing decrease in water resources in Jammu and Kashmir, saying the issue was due to a combination of natural and human-induced factors. They said snowfall and rainfall in Jammu and Kashmir have decreased by 29 per cent in 2024, a trend consistent since year 2020, adding that the reduction in precipitation has resulted in lower snow and rain accumulation, which directly affects the re-filling of groundwater sources. Dr Sami Ullah Bhat, Coordinator of Environmental Science at Kashmir University, speaking to the news agency—Kashmir News Observer (KNO), said the decrease in water resources has led to a noteworthy reduction in the water reserves of rivers and streams. He referred to the recent drying up of springs, including Achwal and similar reports from across the region as evidence of reduced rainfall and groundwater recharge. “Human activities such as road cutting, puncturing of aquifers, and construction work are further exacerbating the problem,” Dr Bhat said, adding the drying of Achwal could also be due to sinking phenomena in ‘Bringhi stream’. Data from line departments like Jal Shakti and Irrigation corroborates this, revealing a noticeable water shortage that is impacting both drinking water supply and irrigation needs, he added. “It is not just about drinking water, but our tourism, agriculture, and horticulture industries all rely on these water resources. We must invest in recharging all available sources,” Dr Sami said, stressing the need to reduce water wastage, both individually and collectively. He urged experts and line departments to collaborate on strategies that address the issue in the short, medium, and long term. The expert also warned that if immediate action is not taken, future years could see even more extreme conditions. Both natural causes, such as climate change, and human activities, including sand and boulder mining, road construction and deforestation, are severely impacting water recharge efforts, he added. (KNO)

Trending

TOP STORIES4 hours ago

Two persons injured in Habbakadal fire incident | KNO

TOP STORIES5 hours ago

Fire breaks out in Srinagar’s Habbakadal area; several houses affected | KNO

TOP STORIES5 hours ago

Process of regularisation of daily wagers will begin this year: CM Omar | KNO

TOP STORIES6 hours ago

LG’s Sainik Sahayta Kendra bolsters soldier-family welfare | KNO

TOP STORIES6 hours ago

Fresh snowfall in higher reaches, rain in plains as temperatures rise across J&K | KNO

TOP STORIES6 hours ago

LoP Sunil Sharma slams budget, calls it repetition of decades-old lies | KNO

TOP STORIES6 hours ago

Pandemonium in Assembly over CM’s remarks | KNO

TOP STORIES6 hours ago

Centre provides Rs 10,155 crore to J&K under PMGSY to strengthen rural road connectivity | KNO

TOP STORIES6 hours ago

J&K has 2 agricultural universities; under ICAR scheme UT received Rs 35.63 crore in 3 years: GoI | KNO

TOP STORIES6 hours ago

Panchayats non-functional in J&K, Ladakh: Centre | KNO

TOP STORIES6 hours ago

GoI sanctions 316 rural road projects for J&K under PMGSY-IV | KNO

TOP STORIES6 hours ago

In 3-years, J&K records only few cases of crimes against Scheduled Castes | KNO

TOP STORIES6 hours ago

Post-reorganisation, SKIMS infrastructure works now handled by PWD: Govt | KNO

TOP STORIES6 hours ago

No transport fee for hired, outsourced vehicles during summer, winter vacations: FFRC | KNO

TOP STORIES6 hours ago

Poets, writers must preserve J&K’s multilingual ethos: Speaker Rahim Rather | KNO

TOP STORIES6 hours ago

Traffic easing plan hinges on road expansion, flyovers | KNO

TOP STORIES6 hours ago

Sopore MLA calls for bringing back inmates from outside J&K jails | KNO

Copyright © 2021