The Supreme Court of India the agony of every Indian in stating "When will Ganga flow with its pristine glory? We are not sure if our generation can see it. We would like at least our future generation to see the development,".
This ‘Clean Ganga Act 2014’ is a draft to provide a enduring mechanism to ensure "suitable means for maintenance of ecological flow." as promised by the government to the court. It aims to empower citizens and local-bodies to discharge their responsibility of protection, conservation and restoration of the lost glory of the Ganga and all water bodies across the country.
This draft is the result of more than 5 years of efforts of river activists across India and Policy-makers of various State and National Water Policies, under the leadership of Raincatcher and Waterman, Magsaysay Award winner Dr. Rajendrasingh.
Draft State Right to Water Bill 2015 Ver 4.0Anupam Saraph
The result of more than 5 years of efforts of river activists across India and Policy-makers of various State and National Water Policies, under the leadership of Raincatcher and Waterman, Magsaysay Award winner Dr. Rajendrasingh, here is a draft Right to Water Bill for States.
This ‘Right to Water Act 2015’ empowers the citizens and the local-bodies a right, and not a privilege, to discharge their responsibility of protection, conservation and restoration of all water bodies for enabling the right to equitable access and abundant quantity of quality water responsibly abstracted from the water cycle for wholesome sustenance and dignity of citizens and all life forms.
Which State's will see it prudent to deliver this legal framework to its citizens this year?
Draft National River Restoration Bill 2014 Ver 5.0Anupam Saraph
The result of more than 5 years of efforts of river activists across India and Policy-makers of various State and National Water Policies, under the leadership of Raincatcher and Waterman, Magsaysay Award winner Dr. Rajendrasingh, here is a draft River Restoration Bill.
There is not a single water body in India that does not face encroachment, pollution or exploitation. As a consequence India is moving from being water stressed to water scarce. The riverine ecosystems are fast being destroyed and the fabric of nature’s ability to support the Indian economy will be irreversibly lost unless the water bodies are protected and conserved. Increasingly the economic performance of India is suffering due to the inability of the water bodies to sustain encroachment, pollution and exploitation of their resources often attributed to a failed monsoon.
The growing urbanization and industrialization continues to increase demand and fuel conflicts of access, equity and availability of the resources of the water bodies. Encroachment and unnatural interventions on the water bodies has increased the draught and flood cycles causing the naturally self-regulating water cycle to be disturbed. Climate change further threatens the predictable rain patterns and the seasonal monsoon making water bodies vulnerable to encroachment and exploitation thus causing increasing disappearance of water bodies that have supported India for thousands of years. The resultant loss of resilience to support life, livelihood and an economy across the districts of India is making India extremely vulnerable to sudden disaster and economic collapse.
As a signatory to the United Nations resolution on Right to Water and Sanitation, and as reiterated by the National Water Policy of 2012 there is an urgent need to provide for the security of water bodies to safeguard and secure our waterbodies for not only today but for generations.
Draft State Right to Water Bill 2015 Ver 4.0Anupam Saraph
The result of more than 5 years of efforts of river activists across India and Policy-makers of various State and National Water Policies, under the leadership of Raincatcher and Waterman, Magsaysay Award winner Dr. Rajendrasingh, here is a draft Right to Water Bill for States.
This ‘Right to Water Act 2015’ empowers the citizens and the local-bodies a right, and not a privilege, to discharge their responsibility of protection, conservation and restoration of all water bodies for enabling the right to equitable access and abundant quantity of quality water responsibly abstracted from the water cycle for wholesome sustenance and dignity of citizens and all life forms.
Which State's will see it prudent to deliver this legal framework to its citizens this year?
Draft National River Restoration Bill 2014 Ver 5.0Anupam Saraph
The result of more than 5 years of efforts of river activists across India and Policy-makers of various State and National Water Policies, under the leadership of Raincatcher and Waterman, Magsaysay Award winner Dr. Rajendrasingh, here is a draft River Restoration Bill.
There is not a single water body in India that does not face encroachment, pollution or exploitation. As a consequence India is moving from being water stressed to water scarce. The riverine ecosystems are fast being destroyed and the fabric of nature’s ability to support the Indian economy will be irreversibly lost unless the water bodies are protected and conserved. Increasingly the economic performance of India is suffering due to the inability of the water bodies to sustain encroachment, pollution and exploitation of their resources often attributed to a failed monsoon.
The growing urbanization and industrialization continues to increase demand and fuel conflicts of access, equity and availability of the resources of the water bodies. Encroachment and unnatural interventions on the water bodies has increased the draught and flood cycles causing the naturally self-regulating water cycle to be disturbed. Climate change further threatens the predictable rain patterns and the seasonal monsoon making water bodies vulnerable to encroachment and exploitation thus causing increasing disappearance of water bodies that have supported India for thousands of years. The resultant loss of resilience to support life, livelihood and an economy across the districts of India is making India extremely vulnerable to sudden disaster and economic collapse.
As a signatory to the United Nations resolution on Right to Water and Sanitation, and as reiterated by the National Water Policy of 2012 there is an urgent need to provide for the security of water bodies to safeguard and secure our waterbodies for not only today but for generations.
There is no need to demonstrate that the flood causes many extremely negative impacts. It damages properties and endangers the lives of humans and other living things. Some high and prolonged floods can compromise vehicle traffic in areas that are not at a high level. Flooding can interfere with drainage and economic land use. Structural hazards can occur in bridges and viaducts, water and sewage systems, energy systems and other structures located in the flood area. Financial losses due to flooding are typically millions of dollars per year.
Sobona Mtisi presents the case for Water Reform in Zimbabwe and outlines its key principles.
Presented at 'Moving Forward with Pro-poor Reconstruction in Zimbabwe' International Conference, Harare, Zimbabwe, (25 and 26 August 2009)
A decree instituting a Water Code, thereby revising and consolidating the laws governing the ownership, appropriation, utilization, exploitation, development, conservation and protection of water resources
How does one create enduring water security for each community?
These points are a summary of the steps required to be taken to ensure that no community will be without water for a single day and no community would suffer floods. The simple steps described here will ensure resilience from climate change.
There is no need to demonstrate that the flood causes many extremely negative impacts. It damages properties and endangers the lives of humans and other living things. Some high and prolonged floods can compromise vehicle traffic in areas that are not at a high level. Flooding can interfere with drainage and economic land use. Structural hazards can occur in bridges and viaducts, water and sewage systems, energy systems and other structures located in the flood area. Financial losses due to flooding are typically millions of dollars per year.
Sobona Mtisi presents the case for Water Reform in Zimbabwe and outlines its key principles.
Presented at 'Moving Forward with Pro-poor Reconstruction in Zimbabwe' International Conference, Harare, Zimbabwe, (25 and 26 August 2009)
A decree instituting a Water Code, thereby revising and consolidating the laws governing the ownership, appropriation, utilization, exploitation, development, conservation and protection of water resources
How does one create enduring water security for each community?
These points are a summary of the steps required to be taken to ensure that no community will be without water for a single day and no community would suffer floods. The simple steps described here will ensure resilience from climate change.
Floods have the greatest damage potential when compared to the other natural disasters, over the environment. Floods are also considered to be both social and economic disasters. This module highlights the details of floods as natural hazards.
Introduction and classification of Wetlands
Important Components of Constructed Wetland
Types and Working Principle of Constructed Wetlands
Advantages and Limitations
Description: Constructed Wetlands are treatment system that use natural processes involving wetland vegetation, soil and their associated microbial assemblages to improve water quality.
Similar to Draft Clean Ganga Bill 2014: An enduring answer to every Indian's plea for clean rivers (20)
What purpose do the economy, energy, or environment serve?Anupam Saraph
Address to the Pune International Centre Conference on:
Energy, Environment and Economic Growth: Emerging Challenges on 22-23 January 2021
Are we addicted to the economy? Have we forgotten it is the environment that gives life, not the economy? Do we recognize that energy, green or otherwise, will not protect the planet, or create reverence for the sacred, or care and respect for the community of life?
Benami voters and laundering elections with aadhaarAnupam Saraph
Why is Aadhaar worse for democracy than Cambridge Analytica?
The UIDAI's own claims about Aadhaar tell how Aadhaar not only destroys democracy but also the sovereignty of India. It pushes control of the elections into the hands of the ecosystem of Aadhaar: those who create Aadhaar enrolments, those who authenticate using Aadhaar, those who decide if your Aadhaar is deactivated and those who make beneficiary and electoral rolls with Aadhaar numbers.
The IPCC says 10 years is all we have. Start your own initiatives to be a climate change leader. Help ensure we halt, even reduce global warming. Help ensure we protect our streams and rivers to ensure our life line.
Share widely with clubs in your city and across your district. Be a climate leader. Say I Can.
This presentation asks 7 key questions to demystify the magic of Aadhaar:
# Is Aadhaar a unique ID?
# Who certifies the identity, age, address, resident status, or even existence of persons assigned a Aadhaar number?
What documents were used to issue Aadhaar numbers?
# Who audited and verified the Aadhaar?
# What is the location address of enrolment operators submitting enrolment packets to be assigned Aadhaar numbers?
# Does Aadhaar identify anyone?
# Whose purpose does Aadhaar serve?
The presentation lists the key implications of the responses of the UIDAI to these questions under the Right to Information Act.
Summary of talk at the Centre for Energy and Environment Studies at the Rijksuniversiteit Groningen.
I described the nature of systems challenges and ways to identify that a challenge is a systems challenge. I then highlighted a few projects currently undertaken by the Government of India and described the systems challenges they created for India. Finally I described the methodology of systems interventions that avoid creating systems challenges and help accomplish difficult missions.
Wicked problems are those that benefit us individually but hurt us as a society. They turn up decades later in unexpected places, often far away from where you are. Often it's too late to be able to address them in our lifetime when we notice them.
Here is my short list of 3 wicked problems we are facing today. Sadly government's don't have think tanks that even understand, let alone address any of these problems.
This is part of my address to 600 students on the biggest challenges they need to deal with in their life.
Address delivered to the aspiring Ph.D. students on responsible conduct of research. Lists various examples of research from diverse fields that have raised questions about the responsible conduct. Asks what the purpose of responsible research should be and how and who should evaluate it.
There may be a video link to the actual talk somewhere, will link it when I have it.
This is the slide deck of my introductory sessions on Systems Thinking. Systems Thinking will help you understand change in the systems you are a part. It offers insights into counterintuitive outcomes you often observe in your own systems. It offers insights into making impact and why impacts fail. It hopes to give you the strength to leave your system better than when you found it.
Quick summary of points submitted to the PMO on why the UIDAI is not even an ID, not even needed, how it facilitates anti-nationals, destroys governance, creates pandora accounts and destroys sovereignty.
Why the United Kingdom scrapped its UIDAnupam Saraph
Presentation made in June 2014 to explain David Cameroon's reasons for keeping his election promise in 2011 and scrapping the UK's UID program and destroying its database.
There is no escape from the cyber space and risks associated with it. Therefore we need to have a strategy to minimise our risks, including, protection from obsolescence, unfair practices, and protection of our identity and digital assets.
Slide deck used for talk for Moneylife Foundation. Video of talk at: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IMD8eO0aQUU&feature=youtu.be
Smart Projects for Smart Cities: The Government Way (Updated to Nov 2015)Anupam Saraph
This is a case study illustrating how bad projects are the norm in smart cities. It illustrates the bad governance and failure of the Ministry of Environment, Ministry of Urban Affairs, the State government and the Urban Local Body to protect public interest.
This case study demonstrates with the example of one stream of how the Pune Municipal Corporation and the JNNURM have been instrumental in destroying urban streams across Pune. JNNURM has funded similar projects across the country.
This has resulted in heavy costs to citizens, particularly:
• 66 Crores of tax money wasted on one streami alone in private interest to steal the green belt and water stream
• Project aimed to continuously waste more money in private interest to destroy all natural streams in Pune and in every urban centre under JNNURM
• Approximately 90 crores worth of wetland and green belt stolen from the public in Devnadi alone
• Water table for entire Baner in Pune (aprox 10 sq Km) destroyed (aprox annual cost of replacing the services 5X the current annual supply of water by tanker mafia)
• Pollution of the ground water and spread of water borne disease by laying sewage lines in the stream (Aprox 44 crores per year in purified drinking water costs for Baner alone + medical expenses to treat water borne disease and mosquito borne disease)
• Crime, failure of the Development Plan by promoting slums to grab the land of the river (Cost to mental health, peace and well being for entire Baner; crime rate up in Baner by more than 100% in last 5 years)
• Risk of damage by flooding increased at least 60 fold as the stream is channelized, constricted and flow changed to 1/60 of its avg. width
• Biodiversity and lungs of the Baner area destroyed by removing the trees and vegetation from the green belt and the river
Keynote address for Common Purpose workshop on Urban Sprawls in Dubai.
Urban sprawls have made cities unliveable. Despite the high costs of sprawls they have grown like cancer across the world.
What are the drivers that make cities sprawl? Can we regulate the sprawl? How can we ensure cities do not grow for ever?
How does the speed of urban transportation drive the urban sprawl? What is the role city nervous systems have to ensure liveable cities?
Roadmap for Digital India submitted to the Prime Minister of India and the Information Technology Minister of India.
Ideas that protect the assets of the country, ensure right projects are being undertaken, no one is denied benefits, justice, equality, liberty and fraternity are within reach, the future scenarios are shared and democracy is not a distant dream.
Designing sustainable and resilient citiesAnupam Saraph
Talk given at Future Proofing Indian Cities in 2011
How does one leverage systems principles to build sustainable and resilient cities? A walk through 5 design principles based on systems characteristics for city designers.
Section 4 is the most important Section in the Right to Information Act. As yet it is the least used by information seekers, the least enforced by Information Commissioners and the least complied to by government agencies.
This presentation makes a case for making Section 4 work.
Presentation at seminar on "Role of Civil Society in enhancing transparency".
Evaluating Urban Renewal in India: What questions to ask of the JNNURMAnupam Saraph
What should be the basis for evaluating urban renewal in India? The Jawaharlal Nehru National Urban Renewal Mission (JNNURM) has been "renewing" urban India. What should be the questions to evaluate its success at renewal?
Summary of a presentation to the School of Habitat Studies,
Tata Institute of Social Sciences and Parisar at Yashada.
A process server is a authorized person for delivering legal documents, such as summons, complaints, subpoenas, and other court papers, to peoples involved in legal proceedings.
This session provides a comprehensive overview of the latest updates to the Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Awards (commonly known as the Uniform Guidance) outlined in the 2 CFR 200.
With a focus on the 2024 revisions issued by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB), participants will gain insight into the key changes affecting federal grant recipients. The session will delve into critical regulatory updates, providing attendees with the knowledge and tools necessary to navigate and comply with the evolving landscape of federal grant management.
Learning Objectives:
- Understand the rationale behind the 2024 updates to the Uniform Guidance outlined in 2 CFR 200, and their implications for federal grant recipients.
- Identify the key changes and revisions introduced by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) in the 2024 edition of 2 CFR 200.
- Gain proficiency in applying the updated regulations to ensure compliance with federal grant requirements and avoid potential audit findings.
- Develop strategies for effectively implementing the new guidelines within the grant management processes of their respective organizations, fostering efficiency and accountability in federal grant administration.
What is the point of small housing associations.pptxPaul Smith
Given the small scale of housing associations and their relative high cost per home what is the point of them and how do we justify their continued existance
Many ways to support street children.pptxSERUDS INDIA
By raising awareness, providing support, advocating for change, and offering assistance to children in need, individuals can play a crucial role in improving the lives of street children and helping them realize their full potential
Donate Us
https://serudsindia.org/how-individuals-can-support-street-children-in-india/
#donatefororphan, #donateforhomelesschildren, #childeducation, #ngochildeducation, #donateforeducation, #donationforchildeducation, #sponsorforpoorchild, #sponsororphanage #sponsororphanchild, #donation, #education, #charity, #educationforchild, #seruds, #kurnool, #joyhome
Jennifer Schaus and Associates hosts a complimentary webinar series on The FAR in 2024. Join the webinars on Wednesdays and Fridays at noon, eastern.
Recordings are on YouTube and the company website.
https://www.youtube.com/@jenniferschaus/videos
Jennifer Schaus and Associates hosts a complimentary webinar series on The FAR in 2024. Join the webinars on Wednesdays and Fridays at noon, eastern.
Recordings are on YouTube and the company website.
https://www.youtube.com/@jenniferschaus/videos
Understanding the Challenges of Street ChildrenSERUDS INDIA
By raising awareness, providing support, advocating for change, and offering assistance to children in need, individuals can play a crucial role in improving the lives of street children and helping them realize their full potential
Donate Us
https://serudsindia.org/how-individuals-can-support-street-children-in-india/
#donatefororphan, #donateforhomelesschildren, #childeducation, #ngochildeducation, #donateforeducation, #donationforchildeducation, #sponsorforpoorchild, #sponsororphanage #sponsororphanchild, #donation, #education, #charity, #educationforchild, #seruds, #kurnool, #joyhome
Russian anarchist and anti-war movement in the third year of full-scale warAntti Rautiainen
Anarchist group ANA Regensburg hosted my online-presentation on 16th of May 2024, in which I discussed tactics of anti-war activism in Russia, and reasons why the anti-war movement has not been able to make an impact to change the course of events yet. Cases of anarchists repressed for anti-war activities are presented, as well as strategies of support for political prisoners, and modest successes in supporting their struggles.
Thumbnail picture is by MediaZona, you may read their report on anti-war arson attacks in Russia here: https://en.zona.media/article/2022/10/13/burn-map
Links:
Autonomous Action
http://Avtonom.org
Anarchist Black Cross Moscow
http://Avtonom.org/abc
Solidarity Zone
https://t.me/solidarity_zone
Memorial
https://memopzk.org/, https://t.me/pzk_memorial
OVD-Info
https://en.ovdinfo.org/antiwar-ovd-info-guide
RosUznik
https://rosuznik.org/
Uznik Online
http://uznikonline.tilda.ws/
Russian Reader
https://therussianreader.com/
ABC Irkutsk
https://abc38.noblogs.org/
Send mail to prisoners from abroad:
http://Prisonmail.online
YouTube: https://youtu.be/c5nSOdU48O8
Spotify: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/libertarianlifecoach/episodes/Russian-anarchist-and-anti-war-movement-in-the-third-year-of-full-scale-war-e2k8ai4
Russian anarchist and anti-war movement in the third year of full-scale war
Draft Clean Ganga Bill 2014: An enduring answer to every Indian's plea for clean rivers
1. 1
THE CLEAN GANGA BILL, 2014
By
, M.P.
A
BILL
STATEMENT OF OBJECTS AND REASONS
The Ganga represents the pride India takes in its rivers. It has symbolized the
pristine glory, sacred and holy and represented the importance of rivers in binging and
maintaining life on earth. Over the years the pressures of growth have allowed for
encroachments, pollution and exploitation of the Ganga and its tributaries as also all the
rivers, streams, lakes and other water bodies in the country.
Failure to protect the water bodies as a common pool through the public trust
doctrine and community participation is compounded by climate change that threatens
the predictable rain patterns and the seasonal monsoon. Rising draught and flood cycles
as a result of the increased unnatural interventions that disturb the natural self-regulating
water-cycle enhance inequity and destroy the water-security of India. A loss of
the river culture enshrined in the national Anthem will lead to a failure to protect neer,
nadi and also nari (water, river and life through woman).
As also highlighted by the National Water Policy of 2012 and India’s being a signatory
to the United Nations resolution on Right to Water and Sanitation, there is an urgent need
to provide for the security of water bodies to safeguard and secure our rivers and their
pristine glory for not only today but for generations. The failure to protect our rivers will
result in a failure of food security and right to life and even threaten the existence of the
country as we know it through our national Anthem.
By ensuring a right to clean rivers this Act empowers what one may do without the
permission of others. It creates a moral and legal barrier that others may not cross. This
right is not actualized and implemented by the actions of others. It offers the power to act
without the permission of others. It will enable a framework to clean the Ganga and every
water body in the country within one generation.
The exercise of this right to clean rivers does not diminish the rights of others,
particularly the right of those who may not be present or able to seek such rights such as
the future generations those in other locations or those life-forms without a
representation. It only imposes the obligation of non-interference on others. This right to
clean rivers is one’s protection against those who attempt to forcibly take their life’s time,
dignity, freedom, resources, money or property through the destruction of our Ganga and
other water bodies.
As such, it is proposed to pass the Clean Ganga Act, 2014, to empower the citizens
and the local-bodies a right, and not a privilege, to discharge their responsibility of
protection, conservation and restoration of all water bodies.
BE it enacted by Parliament in the Sixty-fifth Year of the Republic of India as follows:
2. 2
CHAPTER I
PRELIMINARY
1. This is an Act to provide a right to clean rivers;
(1) This Act may be called the Clean Ganga Act, 2014.
(2) It extends to the whole of India.
(3) Save as otherwise provided, it shall be deemed to have come into force on ,
2014.
2. In this Act, unless the context otherwise requires,
(1) “aggression” shall mean any act that destroys or threatens to destroy the
hydrological, biological or ecological integrity of any waterbody through any means
including but not restricted to encroachments, pollution or exploitation;
(2) "aquifer" means a geological structure or formation, or an artificial landfill, that
is permeated with water or is capable of being permeated with water;
(3) "aquifer interference activity" means an activity involving the penetration of an
aquifer, or the interference with water in an aquifer, or the obstruction of the flow of
water in an aquifer, or the taking of water from an aquifer in the course of carrying
out construction, mining, or reclaiming, or the disposal of water taken from an aquifer
in the course of reclaiming, mining or construction, or the contamination of water in
the aquifer with pollutants;
(4) “area sabha” shall be a formal or informal body of local residents;
(5) “biological integrity” exists if the ability to support and maintain a balanced,
adaptive community of organisms having a species composition, diversity and
functional organization comparable to that of natural habitats of the region is
maintained;
(6) “conservation of waterbodies” means all acts that ensure the ecological,
biological and hydrological integrity is preserved;
(7) “destruction of waterbodies” means all acts that ensure the ecological, biological
and hydrological integrity is disturbed or destroyed;
(8) "drainage basin" or "catchment area"is an extent or area of land where surface
water from rain or melting snow or ice converges to a single point, usually the exit of
the basin, where the waters join another waterbody, such as a river, lake, reservoir,
estuary, wetland, sea, or ocean. The drainage basin includes both the streams and
rivers that convey the water as well as the land surfaces including the mountains and
hills from which water drains into those channels;
(9) “ecological integrity”is maintained if, when subjected to disturbance, the
waterbody sustains an organizing, self-correcting capability to recover toward an end-state
that is ‘normal’ or ‘good’ for that system;
(10) “exploitation” shall mean water use made by a person exceeding the WHO norms
per person;
(11) “habitat” means any census village or census town;
(12) “hydrologic integrity” exists if balanced hydrologic, hydraulic conditions on a
temporal and spatial scale that are comparable to the natural characteristics of the
region are maintained;
(13) “monsoon” means seasonal changes in atmospheric circulation and precipitation
associated with the asymmetric heating of land and sea.It includes both the south-west
monsoon arriving in June as well as the north-east monsoon arriving in
September.
(14) "local authority" means a panchayat, municipal corporation or a municipal
council (by whatever name called) or a cantonment board or any other body,
Short title and
commencement
Definitions
3. 3
entrusted with the duty of supplying the water under the law by or under which it is
constituted;
(15) “notification” means a notification issued under this Act and published in the
Official Gazette;
(16) “person” shall include any organization or government under whatever law
constituted;
(17) “pollution” shall mean means the man-made or man-induced alteration of the
chemical, physical, biological, hydrological, ecological and radiological integrity of any
waterbody;
(18) “protected” shall mean any violation under this act shall be cognizable offence
under the Indian Penal Code 299, 304A, 308, 316-338 and other relevant sections;
(19) "rainwater harvesting" is the accumulating and storing, of rainwater.
Watercourses are natural rainwater harvesting systems. The rate at which water can
be collected from such systems is dependent on the area of the system, its efficiency,
and the intensity of rainfall (i.e. annual precipitation (mm per annum) x square meter
of catchment area x percolation efficiency = liters per annum yield). In the case of
channelized rivers efficiency is close to 0;
(20) “reserved” shall mean unavailable for any purposes other than the natural
purpose;
(21) “river” includes any surface or subsurface watercourse, whether perennial or
intermittent and whether comprising a natural channel or a natural channel
artificially restructured, and any tributary, branch or other watercourse, by whatever
name called, into or from which a watercourse flows;
(22) "river conservation zone" includes all such portions of private land that fall
within 100 m on either side of the floodplain of the main river or lake and 10 m on
either side of the floodplain of a tributary or branch or other watercourse;
(23) “Schedule” means a Schedule appended to this Act;
(24) “social audit” means the process in which the area sabha will monitor and
evaluate the status of the waterbodies in their water block, the implementation of this
Act and the planning and implementation of any programme or scheme within the
scope of this Act;
(25) “State Government”, in relation to a Union territory, means the Administrator
thereof appointed under article 239 of the Constitution;
(26) "sub-surface water", or "groundwater", is water located in the pore space of soil
and rocks. It is also water that is flowing within aquifers below the water table;
Sometimes it is useful to make a distinction between sub-surface water that is closely
associated with surface water and deep sub-surface water in an aquifer;
(27) "surfacewater" means water flowing over land (except in a watercourse) after
having fallen as rain or hail or having precipitated in any other manner; or after rising
to the surface naturally from underground; or that has been collected in a dam or
reservoir; or water that is contained in any stormwater infrastructure;
(28) “sustainable withdrawal” means withdrawals that are at a rate that is less than
the rate of recharge and in doing so do not diminish the rate of flow of the river by
more than 1%;
(29) "to take" water from a water resource includes to take water by pumping or
siphoning the water, to stop, impede or divert the flow of water over land (whether in
a watercourse or not) for the purpose of collecting the water, to stop, impede or direct
the flow of water in any storm water infrastructure for the purpose of collecting the
water, or to extract any water from storm water infrastructure, to divert the flow of
water in a watercourse from the watercourse, to release water from a lake, to permit
water to flow under natural pressure from a well, to permit stock to drink from a
4. 4
watercourse, a natural or artificial lake, a dam or reservoir, to cause, permit or suffer
any activity referred to in a preceding paragraph;
(30) "underground water" means sub-surface water occurring naturally below
ground level or water pumped, diverted or released into a well for storage
underground;
(31) “water body” shall mean any lake, river, pond, nala, stream, tank, well or any
other distinct mass of seasonal or perennial water whether publicly or privately
owned, including the banks and shores thereof. A water body shall also include all
tributaries upstream or sub-surface and catchment for monsoons and absorbing and
releasing rainwater;
(32) “water block” shall mean an area covered by a circle of a radius of 20 times the
width of the waterbody at any point of withdrawal;
(33) “water carrying-capacity” is the maximum population a region can be supplied
water as per WHO norms without resorting to any imports;
(34) "watercourse" means a river, creek or other natural watercourse (whether
modified or not) in which water is contained or flows whether permanently or from
time to time and includes the entire drainage basin, a dam or reservoir that collects
water flowing in a watercourse or a lake through which water flows or a channel into
which the water of a watercourse has been diverted or an estuary through which
water flows;
(35) "waterfront" means: the bed of any river, together with any land lying between
the bed of the river and a line drawn parallel to, and the prescribed distance inland of,
the highest bank of the river, or the bed of any lake, together with any land lying
between the bed of the lake and a line drawn parallel to, and the prescribed distance
inland of, the shore of the lake, or the bed of any estuary, together with any land lying
between the bed of the estuary and a line drawn parallel to, and the prescribed
distance inland of, the mean high water mark of the estuary, or the bed of the coastal
waters of the State, and any land lying between the shoreline of the coastal waters and
a line drawn parallel to, and the prescribed distance inland of, the mean high water
mark of the coastal waters, where the prescribed distance is 40 metres that lesser
distance. Land that falls into 2 or more of the categories referred to may be waterfront
land by virtue of any of the paragraphs relevant to that land and it shall include all
such wetland and river conservation zone whether inside or outside the prescribed
distance;
(36) “water scarce” means the region lacks sufficient water resources to meet the
demands of water usage;
(37) “water security” shall mean the protection of the continued existence and flows
of all water bodies so that the water access of the future generations may not be
compromised for expediency;
(38) “water stress” means the demand for water exceeds the available amount during
a certain period or when poor quality restricts its use;
(39) "water source" means the whole or any part of: one or more rivers, lakes or
estuaries, or one or more places where water occurs naturally on or below the surface
of the ground, and includes the coastal waters of the State;
(40) "well" means an opening in the ground excavated for the purpose of obtaining
access to underground water or an opening in the ground excavated for some other
purpose but that gives access to underground water or a natural opening in the
ground that gives access to underground water;
(41) "wetland" means an area that comprises land that is permanently or periodically
inundated with water (whether through a natural or artificial process) where the
water may be static or flowing and may range from fresh water to saline water and
where the inundation with water influences the biota or ecological processes
(whether permanently or from time to time) and includes any other area designated
5. 5
as a wetland— but does not include—a dam or reservoir that has been constructed by
a person wholly or predominantly for the provision of water for primary production
or human consumption; or an area within an estuary or within any part of the sea;
CHAPTER II
PROVISIONS FOR WATER SECURITY
3. Every local authority shall
(1) Maintain records of survey numbers adjoining to water bodies duly catalogued
and indexed in a manner and the form which facilitates the right to clean rivers under
this Act as well as specified in Schedule I, and ensure that all records that are
appropriate to be computerised are, within a reasonable time, computerised and
connected through a network all over the country on different systems so that access
to such records is facilitated;
(2) Publish within one hundred and twenty days from the enactment of this Act
maps of all water bodies, hills and mountains within the area falling under their
jurisdiction and declare them to be permanent easements reserved and protected
within the meaning of this Act;
(3) Declare on their websites and through press-releases circulated to every
newspaper, radio and tv channel in the region that all the listed water bodies and any
that may have been missed by omission or commission as permanent easements and
reserved and protected within the meaning of this Act; It will be mandatory to all
media to publish this press release failing which it will be deemed an offence
punishable under this Act to the extent of having to issue a free one page
advertisement of the press release or a free 2 minute audio/video advertisement on
electronic media;
(4) Provide to the district administration, within one hundred and twenty days from
the enactment of this Act, an action plan, allocate resources, and to free water bodies
from violations and any aggression, pollution or exploitation under this Act within a
reasonable time not exceeding 3 years;
(5) Undertake and publish a social audit of all water bodies and waterfronts before
December each year;
(6) Publish before 31st of March each year an Audit report of the status of
waterbodies by the CAG;
(7) Prohibit the growth of habitation beyond the water carrying capacity, or lack
natural capacity to absorb pollution free effluents from treatment processes or plants,
and halt all growth of habitations till they lack necessary implementation to ensure
water security within the meaning of this Act.
4. Notwithstanding anything contained in any other law for the time being in force, no
State Government or other authority shall make, any law or order directing-
(1) that any water body or any portion thereof, shall cease to be reserved;
(2) that any water body or any portion thereof may be used for any purpose other
than its natural function as a water body;
(3) that any water body and waterfront or any portions thereof may be assigned by
way of lease or otherwise to any private person or to any authority, corporation,
agency or any other organization;
(4) that any water body or waterfront or any portions thereof may be not be cleared
of any vegetation which have grown naturally in that land or portion, for any purpose;
(5) that any water body or waterfront or any portions thereof may be not be used
for any mining, dumping, construction or allied activities.
Records and
audit
Restrictions on
law making
6. 6
CHAPTER III
RESTRICTION OF ACTIVITIES ON WATER BODIES
5. No person may build any walls, fences, barricades, channels, buildings, sheds of
temporary or permanent nature within any water body or waterfront or any portions
thereof;
6. No person may lay any pipes, cables, or any other construction in any water body or
waterfront or any portions thereof;
7. No person may undertake any industry in any water body or waterfront or any
portions thereof.
8. No person may undertake to farm, mine, or use for dumping storage or as roads any
water body or waterfront or any portions thereof;
9. No person may release or cause to release any substances, sewage, sullage or
effluents or contaminate any waterbody;
10. No person may undertake any activity or cause to do any activity on any waterbody
or waterfront or any portions thereof that will cause the destruction of the
waterbody or will alter its natural flow or pose any threat to the biological or
ecological or hydrological integrity;
11. No person may undertake any activity that can result in or be deemed as aquifer
interference activity;
12. No person may exploit or cause the exploitation of any water body;
13. No person may take more water than their share of the water block to which they
belong;
14. The reserved and protected area may be demarcated by a wire fence or mounds of
debris with vegetation plantation on it if the adjoining property has human
habitation;
15. Rainwater may be released into water bodies or waterfronts provided it is released
through open streams and not pipes and is not contaminated with any pollutants;
16. Water may be drawn from such rivers provided it is drawn from a open stream made
for the purpose that does not exceed ten times the width of the river in length and a
tenth of the diameter of the river and further no such harvest may exceed the
sustainable withdrawal and that such withdrawals do not block access to the
withdrawn water from anyone within the water block;
17. Fishing may be permitted during such seasons that may be designated through
notification as fishing seasons;
18. Waterbody conservation activities and afforestation with indigenous trees on
waterfronts where no trees exist;
CHAPTER IV
GOVERNANCE AND PENALTIES
19. A River Panchayat or Area Sabha for a waterbody may be formed by all such
stakeholders whose life and livelihood is affected by disturbing the natural existence
of the waterbody by virtue of any of the following:
(1) They live within the waterbody block;
(2) They fish in the waterbody;
(3) They depend on the waterbody for rainwater harvesting;
Prohibited
activities
Permitted
Activities
Self-governance
of waterbody
blocks
7. 7
20. All such people may hold a panchayat similar to a gram sabha and undertake to
protect the rights of the river and bring effect to water security within the meaning of
this Act;
21. The Panchayat may have all such powers to ensure the biological, ecological and
hydrological integrity of the waterbody. The resolutions of the Panchayat on
ensuring the integrity of the waterbody shall be binding on the Local Authority
provided that the Panchayat draws no more water than permitted under this Act;
(1) The Panchayat shall ensure that no person is deprived of water access or
permitted any privilege beyond that permissible under this Act for any reason and
particularly of gender, caste or economic and social status;
(2) The Panchayat shall conduct a quarterly physical audit of the following:
(i) The free and natural flow of the water;
(ii) The absence or presence of aggression on the waterbody and waterfront;
(iii) The absence or presence of pollution through any discharge into the
waterbody;
(iv) A list of the users with access to the waterbody and any complaints received
about access or other violations within this Act;
(v) The water withdrawal rate by the block;
(vi) Restrictions, if any, on drawing water, flora or fauna from the waterbody;
(vii) These audit reports will be published as a “State of the waterbody” by the
local authority on its website before December each year;
(3) Each Panchayat can nominate one person to a waterbody parliament of the the
waterbody if there are more than one panchayats on the waterbody;
(4) The waterbody parliament will exercise all such powers to maintain the
biological, ecological and hydrological integrity of the watercourse;
22. All prohibited activities shall be cognizable offences chargeable with the maximum
penalties under the relevant IPC and a punishment requiring the violator to pay fully
for the restoration of the waterbody and to devote 10 years, compoundable for each
offence committed, to the mapping of water bodies in the region and providing a
detailed report that on their exploitation at each location to the Area Sabhas, the local
Police and the local authorities; The local body shall publish all such reports on their
website;
23. Failure of local authorities to fulfill their obligations under this Act shall be deemed
as offence under IPC 166-169;
SCHEDULE I
RECORD OF WATERBODIES
Name of Local Body: Date of Record:
No Waterbody
name and
description
Survey No
on Left
Bank
Survey No
on Right
Bank
Surface
Area of
waterbody
Area of
waterfront
on left bank
Area of
waterfront
on right bank
NEW DELHI;
Offences to be
cognizable