Chennai:
Tamil
Nadu government has questioned the Union government’s move to link the grants for water sector in states to water tariff regulation as
recommended by 13th Finance Commission.
Delivering
the theme address during a seminar on Status of Functioning of Water Regulatory
Authority in India organized by State Water Resources Management Agency here on
Thursday, Public Works Department secretary M Sai Kumar said that the state is
for efficient management of water but is totally against any move by the Centre
to link grants by dictating terms on the level of tariffs to be raised.
“Raising
water tariff will not reduce water consumption and there is no study to prove
this,” he argued at the seminar which was attended by chief engineer of Central
Water Commission chief engineer R K Gupta.
He
said the move to raise water tariff will put the people further in distress
rather than helping them. Kumar said the state government welcomes any move by
Centre to help the state in efficient use of water management.
He
also said the state has greater interaction with all the departments to
conserve water and the state opposes water regulatory authority if its prime
objective is to fix tariffs.
As
per the recommendation of 13th Finance Commission, water regulatory
authority is mandated to regulate water tariff charges for surface and
sub-surface water used for domestic, agriculture, industrial and other purposes
besides to determine and regulate the distribution of entitlement for various
categories of uses as within each category of use.
Gupta
highlighted the need to conserve water and said that the Centre mooted the
pricing of water as it would help in conservation and efficient use of water.
He also stressed the need to think on changing the crop pattern due to erratic
rainfall. He said that the demand for water from industries is likely to go up
five times as such conservation is needed.
He
also stressed the need for synergy between various departments which key to
water conservation. R Subramanian, chairman Cauvery Technical Cell stressed on
the need for drip irrigation and sprinkler irrigation to conserve water.
S
S Rajagopal, director of State Water Resources Management Agency (SWRMA) said
that SWRMA is gathering all water related data including demand and supply and
is putting them on a GIS based platform for better policing.
“The plan is to put the data on the web so that all the
departments can make the best use of it,” he added. Currently, SWRMA has data of
89 dams including four reservoirs.
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