Water Resources
Introduction
'Water is our MOST PRECIOUS resource. India has 16% of the world's POPULATION but only 4% of the world's FRESHWATER resources. The per capita availability of water has FALLEN from 5,177 cubic metres (1951) to about 1,486 cubic metres (2024). ICSE examiners say: "Water CONSERVATION questions are GUARANTEED to appear. KNOW your irrigation methods, multipurpose projects, and rainwater harvesting techniques."'
Sources of Water
| Source | Type | Examples |
|---|
| SURFACE Water | Rivers, lakes, ponds, reservoirs | Ganga, Godavari, Chilka Lake |
| GROUND Water | Wells, tube wells, springs | AQUIFERS below the surface |
| RAIN Water | Seasonal | Monsoon rainfall — JUNE to SEPTEMBER |
Surface vs Ground Water
| Feature | Surface Water | Ground Water |
|---|
| Availability | SEASONAL (monsoon-driven) | MORE reliable |
| Quality | SUSCEPTIBLE to pollution | Usually CLEANER |
| Cost | CHEAPER to use | EXPENSIVE to extract (pumping) |
Need for Water Conservation
| Reason | Explanation |
|---|
| GROWING population | More people = more WATER demand |
| AGRICULTURAL demand | 80% of India's water is used for AGRICULTURE |
| INDUSTRIAL growth | Industries need HUGE amounts of water |
| WATER pollution | Rivers and lakes are being POLLUTED |
| GROUNDWATER DEPLETION | Water tables are FALLING — in Punjab, Haryana, Tamil Nadu |
| UNEVEN distribution | Some areas have PLENTY (NE India) — others face SCARCITY (Rajasthan) |
Irrigation in India
'Irrigation is ARTIFICIAL supply of water to crops. India has the LARGEST irrigated area in the world. ICSE examiners test: TYPES of irrigation, SUITABLE regions, and ADVANTAGES/DISADVANTAGES of each.'
Traditional Methods
1. Canals
| Aspect | Detail |
|---|
| Types | INUNDATION canals (floodwater) and PERENNIAL canals (barrage-regulated) |
| States | Uttar Pradesh, Punjab, Haryana, Rajasthan |
| Advantages | Reliable supply for LARGE areas |
| Disadvantages | WATERLOGGING and SALINITY — overuse leads to soil degradation |
| ICSE Example | INDIRA GANDHI CANAL (Rajasthan) — converted DESERT to farmland |
2. Wells and Tube Wells
| Aspect | Well | Tube Well |
|---|
| Depth | SHALLOW (10–30m) | DEEP (50–300m) |
| Water Source | Groundwater near surface | DEEP aquifers |
| Yield | LOW | HIGH |
| Cost | CHEAP | EXPENSIVE |
| Best For | SMALL farmers | LARGE farms |
| ICSE Note | 'Tube wells are the MOST POPULAR irrigation method in India due to ELECTRIC pumps' | |
3. Tanks
| Aspect | Detail |
|---|
| Definition | ARTIFICIAL reservoirs — collect RAINWATER |
| Location | PENINSULAR India — Tamil Nadu, Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka |
| Use | For RICE cultivation and DRINKING water |
| Disadvantage | DEPEND on rainfall — dry up in SUMMER |
Modern Methods
4. Drip Irrigation
| Aspect | Detail |
|---|
| How It Works | Water drips SLOWLY to the ROOT zone through pipes |
| Water Saving | 70–80% MORE efficient than flood irrigation |
| Best For | FRUITS, VEGETABLES, Cash crops |
| States | Maharashtra, Karnataka, Tamil Nadu |
| ICSE Note | 'Drip irrigation MINIMISES evaporation and runoff — IDEAL for water-scarce areas' |
5. Sprinkler Irrigation
| Aspect | Detail |
|---|
| How It Works | Water SPRAYED like rain through nozzles |
| Best For | SANDY soil, UNDULATING land |
| Advantages | Covers uneven ground. SAVES water (30–40% over flood) |
| Disadvantages | HIGH initial cost. Wind can DISPLACE water |
Rainwater Harvesting
Why is it Needed?
- RECHARGE groundwater
- REDUCE urban flooding
- PROVIDE water in dry seasons
- REDUCE dependence on MUNICIPAL supply
Traditional Methods in India
| Region | Method | Description |
|---|
| Rajasthan | TANKAS | Underground TANKS for drinking water |
| Rajasthan | KHUIS | Deep PITS to collect groundwater |
| West Bengal | DIGHIS | PONDS surrounded by trees |
| Meghalaya | BAMBOO DRIPS | Bamboo pipes carry SPRING water |
| Tamil Nadu | PERCOLATION TANKS | Recharge GROUNDWATER |
Urban Rainwater Harvesting (Modern)
| Component | Function |
|---|
| CATCHMENT | ROOF — collects rainwater |
| DOWNTAKE PIPE | Carries water to FILTER |
| FILTER | Removes DEBRIS |
| RECHARGE PIT | Water SEEPED into GROUNDWATER |
Multipurpose River Projects
What Are They?
'Multipurpose projects SERVE MULTIPLE purposes: IRRIGATION, HYDROELECTRICITY, FLOOD CONTROL, DRINKING water, navigation, and tourism.'
Major Multipurpose Projects
| Project | River | State | Purpose |
|---|
| BHAKRA NANGAL | Sutlej | Himachal/Punjab | IRRIGATION + HYDROELECTRICITY — 2nd highest dam in India |
| HIRAKUD | Mahanadi | Odisha | FLOOD CONTROL + irrigation — longest DAM in India |
| DAMODAR VALLEY | Damodar | Jharkhand/WB | FLOOD CONTROL — multipurpose (MODEL project) |
| TUNGABHADRA | Tungabhadra | Karnataka/AP | Irrigation + HYDROELECTRICITY |
| NAGARJUNA SAGAR | Krishna | Andhra | Irrigation — LARGEST masonry dam in the world |
| TEAHRI | Bhagirathi | Uttarakhand | HYDROELECTRICITY + irrigation — HIGHEST dam in India |
Advantages vs Disadvantages
| ADVANTAGES | DISADVANTAGES |
|---|
| RELIABLE irrigation | DISPLACEMENT of people |
| HYDROELECTRICITY (clean energy) | SUBMERGENCE of forests |
| FLOOD control | SEISMIC risks |
| DRINKING water supply | SILTATION — reduces dam life |
| TOURISM and FISHERIES | SOCIAL costs — rehabilitation issues |
Common Mistakes in ICSE Answers
| Mistake | Correction |
|---|
| Confusing DRIP and SPRINKLER | Drip = ROOT zone. Sprinkler = SPRAYS like rain |
| Forgetting RIVER names with projects | Bhakra = Sutlej. Hirakud = Mahanadi |
| Ignoring RAINWATER harvesting | This is ALWAYS relevant for conservation |
| Calling wells 'modern irrigation' | Wells are TRADITIONAL. Drip/Sprinkler = MODERN |
ICSE Exam Focus — Marks Blueprint
| Question Type | Marks | Frequency |
|---|
| Irrigation methods — types, advantages, location | 6-8 | Always |
| Multipurpose projects — 4 major ones | 6-8 | Always |
| Rainwater harvesting — need and methods | 4-6 | Very High |
| Water conservation — reasons | 4-6 | Very High |
| Drip vs Sprinkler irrigation | 4-5 | Very High |
Self-Test
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Irrigation: Differentiate between DRIP and SPRINKLER irrigation. Which is MORE water-efficient?
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Projects: Name FOUR multipurpose river projects in India. Which river does EACH serve?
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Water scarcity: Why is water SCARCE in India despite adequate rainfall? Explain FOUR reasons.
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Canals: Differentiate between INUNDATION and PERENNIAL canals. Which ONE is MORE reliable?
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Harvesting: What is RAINWATER HARVESTING? Describe ANY TWO traditional Indian methods.
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Tanks: Where are TANK irrigation systems COMMON in India? What is their MAIN disadvantage?
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Bhakra Nangal: On which river is the Bhakra Nangal project built? What are its MAIN benefits?