AccScience Publishing / AJWEP / Volume 21 / Issue 2 / DOI: 10.3233/AJW240024
RESEARCH ARTICLE

Owner Replenishes: Enabling Youth Participation for Ground Water Conservation in Peri Urban Nashik

Ar. Geetanjali Patil1 Ar. Ankita Nikam1*
Show Less
1 MVPS’s College of Architecture, Nashik, Maharashtra, India
AJWEP 2024, 21(2), 75–84; https://doi.org/10.3233/AJW240024
Submitted: 30 May 2023 | Revised: 14 February 2024 | Accepted: 14 February 2024 | Published: 28 March 2024
© 2024 by the Author(s). This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution -Noncommercial 4.0 International License (CC-by the license) ( https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/ )
Abstract

 UN World Water Development Report 2022 ‘Groundwater: making invisible visible’ - has pointed out that the major source of freshwater is groundwater. Groundwater conservation and replenishment have taken the forefront in view of the water crisis faced by the world. Groundwater management is action-oriented, focusing on practical implementation activities and day-to-day operations. It occurs more often at the micro- and mesolevel. The urban area has the privileges of an established public water supply system, the suburbs and periurban areas are almost entirely groundwater dependent. The surface water runoff is mostly wasted and drained into the nalla/ river in these areas.

Peri Urban zone of Nashik includes 177 institutional campuses (schools and colleges). These campuses can be developed as role models and act as leaders for water conservation methods and groundwater recharge for the neighbouring rural zone.

This research is based on a methodology that involves three-pronged approaches, which consist of a) Identifying the potential of educational campuses in the peri-urban zone, b) educating the school students about the water and its conservation techniques as primary stakeholders of the future and c)creating platform at the school level to
interact with the villagers in the vicinity to create the actual impact of the replenishment. This approach ensures active participation of the stakeholders (campus management, admin, student community) in periurban areas for groundwater recharge. Thus sensitising the student community as the primary stakeholder ensures the bottoms up approach for sustainable urban development.

This transdisciplinary approach of engaging the students with the community drives two fold benefits - one, of committed habit formation in them & second, of becoming a leader & a resource person for future green development of the area The discussions on groundwater conservation in this paper point out to the need to coin principle of “Owner Replenishes”- for water conservation on the lines of “Polluter Pays”.

Keywords
Groundwater recharge
urban sustainability
youth participation
peri urban campus
References

Bueno, C. and D. Coq-Huelva (2020). Sustaining what is unsustainable: A review of urban sprawl and urban socioenvironmental policies in North America and Western Europe. Sustainability, 12: 4445. 10.3390/su12114445.

Department of Drinking water and Sanitation, 2009; World Bank, 2010.

Global indicator framework for the SDG and targets of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development.
https://www.education.gov.in/sites/upload_files/mhrd/files/NEP_Final_English_0.pdf https://archive.unescwa.org/sites/www.unescwa.org/files/events/files/water_sdgstargets.pdf Jal Shakti Campus Toolkit.

Margat and Van der Gun (2013, Figure. 5.4, p. 128). Updated by the last author, using reported national data.

Million, A. and A.J. Heinrich (2014). Linking participation and built environment education in urban planning
processes. Current Urban Studies, 2: 335-349.

Peri-Urban Landscapes; Water, Food and Environmental Security, University of Western Sydney, July 2014.

Sulakshana Mahajan, RAMAYAN TO GLOBALAYAN: TRANSFORMATION OF NASIK, City, Space, and Globalization.

The United Nations World Water Development Report 2022, GROUNDWATER Making the invisible visible.

UN World Water Development Report, 2022. United Nations General Assembly (UNGA), 2015.

UNICEF, Malavi

White Paper on A qualitative framework to evaluate the extent of Integrated Urban water management in Indian cities, 2021.

Share
Back to top
Asian Journal of Water, Environment and Pollution, Electronic ISSN: 1875-8568 Print ISSN: 0972-9860, Published by AccScience Publishing