Tuesday, April 29, 2014

Water and Sustainability – Obscure? Technical? Overwhelming?

As a common citizen with no technical background in water and environmental sustainability areas – how was I to understand, digest and further take action on the huge and overwhelming problems surrounding us? All these BIG problems related to Water and Sustainability! Water and it’s related problems are ubiquitous. Water is all around usand yet, water is not totally benign. It feels like the day of reckoning – where the effects of all past mistakes and misdeeds catch up!
As an example – some questions constantly come up: If we have water but our neighbors don’t, what can happen? Can we truly be water secure as a community? Inside community walls? And if the sewage around you is not treated and discharged into storm water drains and the rajakaluves – straight out into the lake, seeping into the ground, then are you really safe? Will that not come back to haunt you soon enough? And then, you see that lake frothing over each time you pass by it – and related stench and dirty outflow into the fields.
water
I did feel overwhelmed by the enormity of it all – and it all seemed too technical and too obscure. Somewhat like this!
I decided to do something about it. I applied to the subject of water – some skills from the corporate world. Initial due diligence helped form a mental picture– no judgments made, just information gathering. Then you start to look at the numbers and timelines and trends and barriers and drivers – assessing it like an approachable market. You dig deeper – figuring out the entire model – from start to finish – and the related industries and products and adjacencies and the whole landscape. Then you seek out experts and consultants and researchwith years of experience in the space, only to validate your understanding. You then articulate it – as one would do about a product. And so you create a framework!  – and a Model cant be too far behind.
So here it is – the G C T model for Water Sustainability. When done correctly, this model leads to results.
GCT
kalyani
G for Generation of Water – This is about creating a clean, sustainable source of water. This is nothing new – a Byzantine city used stone structures as condensers, depositing moisture from air to a basin,which connected to wells. 
Ancient temples in India were nevebuilt without tanks – Kalyanis – they have always caught rainwater. Guess rainwater was considered holy water! Generation includes ground recharging at different levels, rainwater harvesting and many such efforts.
C for Conservation of Water – This teaches you to treat water as a precious resource!
conserve
It is simply about using gadgets at home which reduce water consumption by 30 – 40% just by being there. In most countries, plumbing already has these checks in place. There is a little denial involved – very little change in lifestyle. A culture shift!  Also – it is about using various sources of water in tandem with each other to achieve effectiveness in conservation – including potable/ drinking water, grey water and black water.
Finally – T stands for Treatment and Safety of Water – This completes the cycle. Treatment can actually result in generation – G – and that is how it completes the cycle! 
treat
Water Treatment gives you adequate methods to ensure that water is safe for consumption, but doing it in a responsible way. Treatment also includes sewage treatment and similar techniques which ensure use of every drop of water is used to it’s utmost limit and actually allowing a community to create a ‘zero waste’ environment. Really? YES – Really!
Staytuned – we will tell you some success stories next!

Wednesday, April 9, 2014

Calling our Water Warriors!

Did you catch Whitefield Rising’s INKtalks Water event at Jagriti on Saturday April 5thKiran Khanna ? You know I am just another concerned Whitefield citizen – just like you! I want to mention that I was ecstatic to see the turnout on Saturday! Thank you for spending your morning with us, and for all your questions and concerns throughout the event!
Firstly – if you have not done so already, we urge you to complete the water survey. I have decoded some initial statistics for us – here is our story today…
  • Nearly 50% of us buy tanker supplied water – we are not really self sustained!
  • 80% of our borewells are greater than 600 ft deep – if you recall Alok of T-Zed told us that his borewells are in the range of 120 to 200 ft. We are digging deeper, spending more resources.
  • Our average water consumption is between 400 – 1000 liters per person/ per day – as opposed to average government estimates at 150 liters per person/ per day!
While we all worry about the deteriorating water conditions in Whitefield – the good news is that the solution is in our hands! And another piece of good news is
Pic4that if we do our piece, and tell others about it – we can inspire them to take their steps! Whitefield Rising is your platform as there is success in numbers!
    • The presentations for the water event are available over here.If you want to assess your community’s re-charge, harvest, grey-water/eco-STP proposal, we are here to help! We can offer (some of us, pro-bono) opinions and share our
    • experiences.
If you are about to start a re-charge, harvest, grey-water/eco-STP project, we want to hear about it, blog and broadcast your efforts and successes on our website.
  • If you want to join hands to work on the ‘larger picture’ – including start conversations with BWSSB, work on cleaning up our wonderful lakes and more, please write to water.warriors@whitefieldrising.orPic2g
Below are the speakers contact details for you – feel free to reach out to the experts. But do circle back about your efforts to water.warriors@whitefieldrising.org to help us help you :)
TopicSpeakerContact
Little Drops of Water – we want Water Warriorsl!Kiran KhannaNitya Ramakrishnankiran@whitefieldrising.org  +91 9739713111nitya@whitefieldrising.org +91-9741351304
Masagi’s War For WaterAyyappa MasagiFounder, Rain Water Conceptsrainwatermasagi2000@yahoo.co.in  +91-9448379497
Lifecycle of a Water DropSekar SrinivasanFounder, Ecoserv Solutionssrinivasan.sekar@ecoservsolutions.in+91-99001022008
Sewage StoriesRajesh ShahHead, Peer Water Exchangeshahrv@gmail.com +91-9740322557
Our Early SuccessesArvind KeerthiAlok Kuchlousarvind.keerthi@whitefieldrising.org +91-9342502992kuchlous@gmail.com +91-9902012104
A Larger ImpactMala SubramaniumCEO, ARGHYAMmala@arghyam.org +91-9620945800
Wake the LakeSuresh Nairsnair63@yahoo.com +91-9845042117
Varthur Lake – What will it take?Anuradha HegdeConsultant, Action Research Consultinganuradhahegde@gmail.com +91-9845044818
The Government as a StakeholderManjunatha PrasadConsultant, Action Research Consultingarconsultin@gmail.com +91-8277336679
Low Energy STPTharun KumarDirector, Paradigm Environmental Strategiestharun@ecoparadigm.com +91-7259002986