Dear Friends/Co-sailors,
In the today’s pick section of my blog, I am sharing this
news published in the Hindu from Rajasthan where the villagers are rightly
apprehensive about effect of Coca Cola’s bottling plant on the ground water of
the area.
The farmers of the region, as the report points out, blame
the drastic fall on the bottling plant set up by Hindustan Coca-Cola Beverage,
which allegedly draws far more water than can be naturally recharged.
We are facing similar problems in other parts of India,
including Odisha and the issue needs serious attention of policy makers and others
alike.
Look forward to your reactions.
Thanks and regards,
Ranjan
At Kaladera farmers battle beverage giant
Farmers in this Rajasthan block blame the drastic fall in
groundwater table on the bottling plant, saying it draws out far more water
than can be naturally recharged
Till the late 1990s, Bansi Aheer, like all other farmers
around Kaladera, used to irrigate his seven-bigha farm, drawing water from a
well. “Water was easily available at about 40 feet. But it dropped annually by
one or two feet and later by eight or ten feet,” he says.
Today, covered with thorny shrubs, the well appears no more
than a relic. Since 2000, the groundwater levels at Kaladera have dropped so
sharply that even wells deepened to 80 feet couldn’t satisfy irrigation needs.
In 2002, another farmer, Rameshwar Kudi, had to sink a
borewell on his farm to grow water-intensive crops. “I was among the first
people to do that. By 2003, most farmers, including the small ones, had
borewells dug on their farms,” he says. The initial borewells at Kaladera were
120-140 feet deep, but the new ones are “easily 200 feet.”
Farmers of the region blame the drastic fall on the bottling
plant set up by Hindustan Coca-Cola Beverage, which allegedly draws far more
water than can be naturally recharged.
Mr. Kudi is an active member of the Kaladera Jan Sangharsh
Samiti, an organisation of farmers, that has been demanding closure of the
plant, set up in the Rajasthan State Industrial Development and Investment
Corporation Ltd. (RIICO) industrial area in 1999 and started operations the
next year.
According to data compiled by the Rajasthan Groundwater
department, in the 16 years from 1984 the groundwater levels at Kaladera
dropped from 13 to 42 feet, at an average annual rate of 1.81 feet. But from
2000 to 2011, the drop was sharp from 42 to 131 feet at the rate of 8.9 feet a
year.
While the beginning of Coca-Cola’s operations coincided with
the start of Kaladera groundwater getting depleted rapidly, there are several
reasons, including increased extraction by farmers through motorised pumps and
the setting up of other water-intensive industries such as paper mills.
For the farmers, however, the multinational beverage giant
is the main culprit.
Two panchayat samitis — Amber and Govindgarh — have passed
unanimous resolutions demanding closure of the plant. Groundwater officials,
however, do not see Coca-Cola as the main culprit. “Groundwater levels are
dropping rapidly almost everywhere in Rajasthan, especially around Jaipur. But
the primary reason for this is agricultural use, not industrial,” says P.K.
Parchure, Regional Director, Central Groundwater Board, Jaipur office.
Heera Lal Regar, owner of five bighas of farmland, is amused
by comparisons between farmers and Coca-Cola. “We produce food that feeds the
country. What does Coca-Cola produce? Is it as important as food?” he asks.
Coca-Cola, however, claims it recharges “at least nine times
more groundwater than it uses, thanks to the rainwater harvesting potential
created by the bottling plant.”
“Nine times are a lot... but even if they manage to recharge
double the amount they use, they are doing a good job,” says Dr. Parchure. “It
is difficult to confirm the quantum of recharge as the only way to arrive at a
tentative figure is based on the number of recharge structures they build and
the recharge potential of these structures.”
Coca-Cola’s plant has two bottling lines — a Returnable
Glass Bottle (RGB) line and a PET line — both of which manufacture sparkling
soft drinks. The two lines operate for not more than 150 days in a year,
according to the company.
“Our plant at Kaladera uses less than one per cent of the
area’s available water, which is negligible in comparison to agriculture
according to the TERI report of 2008,” a statement by Coca-Cola claims.
The company says it has improved its water usage ratio —
defined as litres of water used to make one litre of finished beverage — over
the last six years.
“While water withdrawal has remained almost stable — 89,502
kilolitre/annum in 2007 to 89,467 in 2013 — the water usage ratio has improved
significantly —from 3 in 2007 to 1.7 in 2013,” it claims.
According to Coca Cola, the decline in the groundwater level
is a regional problem and attributing it to the plant will be unfair.
-
MAHIM PRATAP SINGH, January 23, 2014
Source: http://www.thehindu.com/news/national/other-states/at-kaladera-farmers-battle-beverage-giant/article5606745.ece
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