Skip to content Skip to navigation

Rivers to the fore

The Namami Brahmaputra festival could not have happened at a better time, with rivers around the world in focus, albeit due to varied reasons. The mighty red river of India carries the hopes and aspirations of millions and at the same time, elicits fear and reverence, yet increasing pollution, the will of development planners and the consequences of global warming could transform the Brahmaputra basin. The ‘Son of Brahma’ weaves an increasingly tempestuous course as ‘He’ meanders down the valley, and further intensification of the hydrological cycle due to climate change and planned human interventions could exacerbate the riparian impacts.

Late last year, the United Nations issued a warning about over 323 million people being at risk from the pollution of rivers and lakes. According to the UN Environment Programme report, Cholera, Typhoid and other deadly pathogens are increasing in more than half of the rivers in Africa, Asia and Latin America. An estimated 3.4 million people die each year from these water-borne diseases and half of them are children under the age of five years. Predictable, Asia has been worst hit, with up to 50% of all rivers now affected by severe pathogen pollution caused by a cocktail of untreated waste water disposal, agricultural pesticides run-off and industrial pollution.

Following the historic judgement declaring the Whanganui river as a living entity with full legal rights in New Zealand, the Uttarakhand High Court had decreed that the rivers Ganga and Yamuna, as well as their tributaries are "legal and living entities having the status of a legal person with all corresponding rights, duties and liabilities." The court further elaborated that the order was to ensure "preservation and conservation of the two rivers and to protect the recognition and faith of society." The legal status accorded to the Ganga and the Yamuna means that polluting the water bodies would amount to harming a human being. The court further noted that "the extraordinary situation has arisen since the rivers Ganga and the Yamuna are losing their very existence," alluding to the prevalent disregard for water bodies, which are often treated as dump for garbage and industrial effluents.

The Indian government’s intention to “exploit the hydro-power potential of the Brahmaputra,” while expressing consternation about the dam built by China, is paradoxical. So is the planned river linking project through a network of dams, canals and reservoirs to drain the Brahmaputra and the Ganga to water-deficient areas. This comes at a time when appreciation of the devastating impacts of large dams on people and the environment has forced governments away from the age of dams. According to studies, the threat to World Heritage sites like the Kaziranga and Manas national parks and other sanctuaries in the Brahmaputra valley is not from poachers or encroachers, but from the 70 planned dams and hydel projects upstream and on its tributaries.

Large dams alter and fragment the riverine ecosystem from one that was cold and flowing to a warm and stagnant state, with devastating consequences for wildlife and for people. The World Commission on Dams had warned, back in 2000, that dams were responsible for displacing between 40-80 million people. The Wild and Scenic Rivers Act of 1968 protects more than 12,000 miles of free-flowing rivers in the US and it is now leading the movement to decommission dams and restore rivers to their natural free-flowing state.

Earlier this year, China abandoned plans to build a series of giant hydroelectric dams on the Nuijiang, the last free-flowing river in the country, after a decade long campaign by environmentalists to project one of the country’s most spectacular and biodiverse regions. Last year, Brazil suspended the licensing process for the São Luiz do Tapajós dam, which was expected to be the second largest hydroelectric dam in the country. The World Bank refused to finance the Inga 3 dam on the Congo river and Chile and Peru dropped plans for a series of dams on major rivers.

It is estimated that over 1.4 billion people depend on water from the Indus, Ganga, Brahmaputra, and the Yangtze and Yellow rivers of China, all fed from the Tibetan plateau and adjacent mountain ranges, known as the Asian Water Towers. Snow and ice reserves locked in glaciers are important in sustaining seasonal water availability of these rivers and accelerated melting of glaciers could have disastrous long-term consequences. Studies have established that meltwater from the Himalayan glaciers are very important for the Indus and Brahmaputra basins, making an estimated 60 million people vulnerable to reductions of flow, water availability and food security.

The Brahmaputra valley may be emblematic of the woes of river communities across Asia and in other developing countries. It may be less polluted in comparison with other major rivers in India, but has a plethora of problems unique to the basin. The swirling flood waters and rampant erosion have displaced millions, with some communities permanently living on embankments. Yet waves of migrants have settled in the amorphous char chaporis, and this influx of climate refugees can only escalate simmering conflicts over land. One reason for hope, perhaps, is that the new legal status to rivers will also be extended to the Brahmaputra and deter diversion of the waters for the river-linking project.

 

Add new comment

Random Stories

CM campaigns in Nagaon

17 Mar 2014 - 8:09pm | AT News
Chief Minister Tarun Gogoi on Monday participated two huge poll rallies in Nagaon and Koliabor on behalf of Jonjunali Baruah and Gaurav Gogoi who are contesting in the Lok Sabha polls slated for...

Narayana Hospital to conduct free screening health camp for journos

8 Jan 2019 - 11:52am | Nava Thakuria
Narayana Super-Specialty Hospital, Amingaon (north Guwahati) will conduct a free health camp for the member-journalists of Guwahati Press Club (GPC) along with their families on Saturday (12 January...

Bhutan delegation visits Kokrajhar

13 Sep 2017 - 8:17am | AT Kokrajhar Bureau
À three member delegation team from Sarpang district of Bhutan visit Kokrajhar on Tuesday. Led by Karma Galey, Deputy Commissioner of Sarpang district, the delegation toured many areas of  the...

Hagrama draws flak

9 Sep 2013 - 8:02pm | AT News
ABSU, AKRSU and BPPF criticized  BTC Chief Hagrama Mohilary for remarks on agitating groups taking political gain for next Parliamentary elect next year for separate statehood.ABSU president...

Other Contents by Author

An awareness camp for the students of St. Theresa's School, Morigaon was held on Tuesday at the school premises at Shankardev Nagar on the occasion of Earth Day 2014. A collaborative effort between Sanctuary Asia, Earth Day Network, ROSE, Morigaon and Green Guard Nature Organization, the presentation focussed on the challenges to the region from climate change and global warming, and the available solutions, with special reference to Green Cities, the theme for the Earth Day celebrations this year. Around 250 students and teachers of the school attended the presentation conducted by Rituraj Phukan, Secretary General of GGNO. Rituraj Phukan has trained as a Climate Leader under former...
About 600 Amur Falcons have been spotted at the Borigaon, Borbori and Nellie areas of Morigaon district during the last few days. The birds have been noticed roosting on power transmission lines or flying overhead. Local villagers are blissfully unaware of the presence of these long distant migrants amidst them. During 2001, members of Green Guard Nature Organization had recorded nearly 18000 birds near Morigaon which was unprecedented in Assam. Since then, only a handful of birds have been spotted in the intervening years, mostly near Amchoi, Morigaon. Tens of thousands are known to congregate at the Doyang reservoir in the Wokha district of Nagaland. The Doyang reservoir was in...
Villagers of Ghilalota found a dead tusker in the waters of the Hodhodi in the early hours of 25 September that had been washed downstream by the surging waters of the Hodhodi due to heavy rains last night. Dulu Bora of Green Guard Nature Organization observed that the elephant tusks had been hacked off. As some of the local villagers were demanding to cut the trunk for meat (!), Dulu and other like minded people decided to move the body further downstream where they could mobilise people to prevent such perversion.A priest was summoned by Green Guard Nature Organization members to perform the last rites of the pachyderm and prevent people from taking its flesh. Dulu observed...
Green Guard Nature Organization organized 'World Elephant Day 2013' program amongst fringe forest communities affected by intense Human-Elephant Conflict (HEC) at the Karbi foothills, near Chapanala, Nagaon. Over 200 children from fringe forest communities were provided clothes donated to our organization by Mr. SarwanDeep Singh from Delhi, at a ceremony at Samasya line, Lungsung, in the presence of Forest staff, Lungsung T.E. manager and staff, village elders & women from several nearby villages. Around 50 banana saplings & stumps were also planted under the ongoing 'Community Elephant Fodder Plantation' program 2013 to mark the 2nd World Elephant Day, which is a global...
A 13 feet King Cobra was rescued by Dulu Bora of Green Guard Nature Organization near 17 no. line quarters of Lungsung Tea Estate, Karbi foothills, near Chapanala, Nagaon, on Saturday. It was later released back to the wild in the presence of forest offiials in less than a mile from its place of rescue. The King Cobra was first spotted at a residence at the 17 No. line quarters of the Lungsung Tea Estate. Later when the people gathered there, it slithered out to a nearby ditch. The manager of the estate informed Bora of Green Guard Nature Organization. Bora successfully managed to coax the snake into a sack. Meanwhile others from Green Guard Nature Organization informed forest staff and...
A project, 'Community Elephant Fodder Plantation' to plant banana plants in the Karbi foothills was launched by Green Guard Nature Organization today with local villagers in areas of intense human-elephant conflict, on the last day of the 'Bon Mahotsav' week. In the first phase, stumps of the variety locally known as 'Bhim Kol', a giant variety relished by elephants, were collected from Lunsung village. Villagers led by Satyam Naik and the Green Guard team led by Dulu Bora went around Lungsung for voluntary door-to-door collection of banana stumps.  Villagers have also started collecting jackfruits seeds for plantation as the fruit is also a favourite of the pachyderms. More...
Two nature conservation NGOs of Assam, Aaranyak and Green Guard Nature Organization (IBCN partners) collaborated to organize 'street plays' at several places in the towns of Morigaon and Nagaon to promote conservation awareness of the Globally Threatened Greater Adjutant Stork (GAS) on 26th of May. Locally known as Hargila, the world's most threatened stork with an estimated global population of less than 1000 birds has major breeding colonies in these two towns in central Assam. The two NGOs had earlier collaborated on a very successful project for the rescue, rearing and rehabilitation of injured, sick & fallen Greater Adjutant nestlings at Nagaon from 2001-2004, under financial...
Green Guard Nature Organization collaborated with Sanctuary Asia to observe Earth Day 2013 at Nagaon by educating students of two schools; Loyola School, Nagaon...