Towards a water-smart India
With the onset of monsoon rains this year, a lesser-known but profoundly significant initiative has quietly taken root across the country’s ecologically sensitive terrains, a first-ever national census of springs. Piloted in Manipur and expected to scale across the Indian Himalayan Region (IHR), this initiative represents not just a hydrogeological mapping exercise, but a paradigm shift in India’s approach to water sustainability.
Springs are natural outflows of groundwater and have historically served as the primary water source for millions in the IHR, which spans 10 hill states and 4 hill districts of Assam and West Bengal. According to the 2018 NITI Aayog report titled “Inventory and Revival of Springs in the Himalayas for Water Security,” over 3 million of India’s estimated 5 million springs are found in the Himalayas alone.
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More than 60 per cent of rural Himalayan communities rely on these springs for drinking, irrigation, and livestock use. Yet, alarming evidence suggests that nearly 50 per cent of these perennial springs have dried up or becomes easonal due to unregulated land use, deforestation, and climate-induced variability in rainfall. The Government of Manipur, in collaborating with the North-Eastern Space Applications Centre (NESAC), the Water Resources Department, and the Ministry of Jal Shakti, has initiated a state-wide census and digital mapping of over 2,900 springs.
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Using remote sensing and geospatial technologies, this effort will generate a detailed hydrological and get agged inventory of each spring, including data on seasonal discharge variability, quality indices, and dependence levels. This will not only inform micro-level........





















Toi Staff
Gideon Levy
Penny S. Tee
Sabine Sterk
Mark Travers Ph.d
Gilles Touboul
John Nosta
Daniel Orenstein