Drought -- National Drought Mitigation Center
Title
Poor Water Resources and Drought in the Gujarat/Saurashtra Regions of India
Document Type
Article
Date of this Version
October 2001
Inadequate water resources pose a big threat to
the economy, human activities, and livelihood in
the Gujarat/Saurashtra regions of India. Scanty rainfall
with wide aberrations in its distribution has
made the situation worse, leading to chronic drought
in the state in 2001. With the exception of the
Narmada and Tapi rivers, there are hardly any water
resources to sustain agricultural production in
the region. The gradual disappearance of forest
cover in the state has further aggravated the drought
situation. This has led to large-scale erosion of the
topsoil, particularly near the riverside. There is apprehension
that the region will soon become an
“environmental refugee” zone.
In addition, groundwater resources are overexploited
in the state, with the water table going
down nearly 4 m per year, particularly in the premonsoon
season. The state was once a lush green
carpet of groundnut and cotton crops, but mismanagement
of water resources at all levels has led to
the current drought problem in the Gujarat,
Saurashtra, and Kutch regions. Figure 1 depicts the
current drought-affected regions of the state.
India has a record of 12 successive good monsoons,
with the 13th in the offing this year. But the
drought in the Gujarat and Saurashtra regions may
be due to the poor monsoon and winter rainfall last
year. The crisis was aggravated by overexploitation
and reckless use of groundwater. Out of 100 million
people affected by drought in India, 25 million
are from this region, spread over 17 districts of the
state, and 7 million cattle are also affected. There is
a 30% deficit of food grains in this region.

Comments
Published in Drought Network News Vol. 13, Nos. 2–3, Summer–Fall 2001. Published by the International Drought Information Center and the National Drought Mitigation Center, School of Natural Resources, University of Nebraska – Lincoln.