Making the invisible, visible: 3D aquifer models as an effective tool for building water stewardship in Maharashtra, India

Author:

Kale Eshwer1ORCID,D'Souza Marcella1,Chemburkar Sarita1

Affiliation:

1. WOTR Centre for Resilience Studies (W-CReS), Watershed Organisation Trust, The Forum, 2nd Floor, Padmavati Corner, Pune-Satara Road, Pune, Maharashtra 411009, India

Abstract

Abstract Frequent droughts, growing water demand, and the ease of accessing groundwater, particularly through boreholes, have led to an over-dependence on groundwater to meet notably agricultural demands in India. This has led the Watershed Organisation Trust (WOTR) to motivate and capacitate rural communities for ‘water stewardship’ in which the village as a whole comes together to learn about its resources to manage them better. However, improving the management of the water resource is challenging as the general perception is that the water found below one's farm belongs to the landowner. Moreover, what is below the surface is not visible, therefore not well understood. Thus, WOTR designed a water stewardship initiative (WSI) with the Community-Driven Visual Integrator (CoDriVE-VI or CDVI) as one of the important tools; it produces an operational 3D map of the local aquifer. WOTR implemented the WSI in villages in Maharashtra, India. This paper evaluates the impacts and potential of the WSI and CDVI. We observed that the visual effect of these 3D models of aquifers helps local communities and farmers better understand and appreciate groundwater as a shared resource. This tool is effective in promoting water stewardship, achieving behavioural change in water users, and helping implement groundwater laws and policies.

Publisher

IWA Publishing

Subject

Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law,Water Science and Technology,Geography, Planning and Development

Reference25 articles.

1. Adhav C. A., Sendhil R., Chandel B. S., Bhandari G., Ponnusamy K., Ram H. (2021). Socio-Economic Vulnerability to Climate Change – Index Development and Mapping for Districts in Maharashtra, India. http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3854297.

2. Social Cognitive Theory: An Agentic Perspective

3. CGWB (2013). Ground Water Information: Dhule District Maharashtra. Ministry of Water Resources, Central Ground Water Board, Government of India. Available at: http://cgwb.gov.in/District_Profile/Maharashtra/Dhule.pdf.

4. Chaterjee B. (2021). Seven-fold increase in drought events, six-fold rise in frequency of extreme flood events in Maharashtra over 50 years: study. Hindustan Times, accessed 12 January 2021.

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