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Taming The Thar

Down To Earth

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September 01, 2019

What it takes to reclaim the world’s most populated desert

- P C Moharana And O P Yadav

Taming The Thar

DESERTIFICATION IS severe in hot and arid northwestern India which comprises the Thar desert. Of the 32 million hectares (ha) of hot and arid land in the country, Rajasthan holds the maximum share with 62 percent. The Thar is located between the Aravalli mountain range in the east and the river Indus in the west and both influence the desert’s climate, landform, and hydrology.

The weather here is absolutely inhospitable in summers with low humidity and wind speeds of 40-60 km per hour. The seasonal and annual temperature range is high. It may rise to 50°C in summers and dip to as low as -4°C in winters. The annual average rainfall is very low, varying from 100 mm in the west to 500 mm in the east, but pan evaporation (a measurement that integrates the effects of temperature, humidity, rainfall, and wind) is a high 1,800 mm, making the desert water-scarce.

The sand-covered terrain spreads over 80 percent of the area, a large part of which comprises sand dunes. Census 2011 shows that 28 million people live across western Rajasthan in over 12 districts and four agro-climatic zones that have a dominant agrarian land use.

Desertification has hit nearly 70 percent of the state. Wind erosion, a dominant process of desertification in the state, has affected 44.41 percent area. Vegetation degradation and water erosion also affect desertification.

Wind erosion and deposition causing sand movement and dust storms are the characteristic features of the Thar. Their severity is felt more in summers and is caused due to high wind speed, sandy terrain, sparse vegetation cover, and human activity. About 0.15 million ha, or 72 percent of the area, is affected by wind erosion or deposition, of which 5,800 sq km is very severely degraded, 25,540 sq km is severely affected, 73,740 sq km is moderately affected and 52,690 sq km is slightly affected.

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