Facebook Pixel War zone Cauvery | Down To Earth – Science – Lesen Sie diese Geschichte auf Magzter.com

Versuchen GOLD - Frei

War zone Cauvery

Down To Earth

|

October 1, 2016

Karnataka and Tamil Nadu are once again at logger heads over the sharing of the Cauvery waters. Why have the successive agreements failed to resolve the century-long dispute?

- Rajeshwari Ganesan & Shreeshan Venkatesh

War zone Cauvery

THERE IS nothing unnatural about the Cauvery conflict. Any river that runs through different political boundaries is bound to have regions and people fighting over the resource. What is unnatural is the factors that have rendered the water-sharing agreements between Karnataka and Tamil Nadu—the two main stakeholders in the dispute—dysfunctional since they were first drafted in 1872.

This September, the conflict once again dominated the news after Karnataka refused to release water to Tamil Nadu, the downstream state. Karnataka says it cannot share water when the Cauvery reservoirs are barely able to satisfy the drinking water needs of the state. By refusing to share water, it flouted the Cauvery Water Dispute Tribunal (cwdt) award of 2007 that mandated a proportionate reduction in each state’s share in rain-deficit years.

This year the two states received deficit rainfall, especially around the source of the river. Tamil Nadu promptly took the matter to the Supreme Court. It maintains that its farmers growing the winter crop of paddy, or samba, are totally dependent on the Cauvery water.

The apex court has made stopgap allocations through three rulings in September. The first was on September 5, which ordered a daily release of 10,000 cubic feet per second (cusecs) to Tamil Nadu for 10 days. The order resulted in violent demonstrations in Karnataka. The clashes led to the death of two persons in Bengaluru. Curfew was imposed in several parts of the city. Both the states observed bandh

WEITERE GESCHICHTEN VON Down To Earth

Down To Earth

Down To Earth

THE GREAT PIVOT

China's moves to transition to clean energy offer critical lessons to India

time to read

4 mins

March 01, 2026

Down To Earth

Down To Earth

COAL V CORRIDOR

A proposal to mine coal along a corridor that links two tiger reserves in central India is a step away from getting final clearance. The move could affect movement and genetic diversity of tiger populations in the region

time to read

8 mins

March 01, 2026

Down To Earth

Down To Earth

India's challenging AI predicament

Hobbled by lack of innovation and AI skills in its crucial technology sector, India is focusing on a ruinous plan to host data centres

time to read

4 mins

March 01, 2026

Down To Earth

China to implement zero tariffs across Africa

CHINA ON February 14 announced that it will implement zero tariffs for imports from all the 53 African nations it has diplomatic relations with, starting from May 1.

time to read

1 min

March 01, 2026

Down To Earth

Poverty, sans the threshold

MEASUREMENT OF poverty is a fundamental exercise, needed to direct development programmes.

time to read

2 mins

March 01, 2026

Down To Earth

Down To Earth

A bridge across forever

For two decades, a Chhattisgarh village remains stuck in a loop of building temporary river crossings to access markets and sell forest produce

time to read

4 mins

March 01, 2026

Down To Earth

Liveable cities need a new model

CRY FOR my Delhi. This is my city—my family records many generations who have lived here.

time to read

3 mins

March 01, 2026

Down To Earth

Down To Earth

Real impacts of the changing seasons

This refers to the article \"1,500 days, and an alarm for new climate\" (1-15 December, 2025).

time to read

1 mins

March 01, 2026

Down To Earth

Down To Earth

‘It’s a systematic effort by US to dismantle climate policy’

The US, the world's largest historical emitter of greenhouse gases, has overturned its “endangerment finding”, the legal foundation for regulating emissions under the Clean Air Act since 2009.

time to read

4 mins

March 01, 2026

Down To Earth

Amazon turned carbon source in 2023 drought

EXTREME DROUGHT and a prolonged heatwave in 2023 pushed parts of the Amazon rainforest from acting as a carbon sink to becoming a carbon source for three months, according to a February 13 study published in the journal AGU Advances of the American Geophysical Union.

time to read

1 min

March 01, 2026

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size