Water Resources
Bangladesh is endowed
with plenty of surface and groundwater
resources. The surface water resources
comprise water available from flowing
rivers and static water bodies as
ponds, beels and haors. Surface water
inflows of the country vary from a
maximum of about 140,000 m3/s in August
to a minimum of about 7,000 m3/s in
February. Two main rivers, the brahmaputra
and the ganges account for more than
80% of streamflows. The highest flood
discharge of the Ganges observed at
hardinge bridge in1987 was 76,000
m3/s and that of the Brahmaputra observed
at Bahadurabad in 1988 was 98,600
m3/s. the minimum discharges of the
rivers are 261 m3/s and 2800 m3/s,
respectively. The average daily flow
of the Ganges is about 10,874 m3/s,
which reduces to 1366 m3/s during
season and increases to 32,00 m3/s.
The highest flow is about 44,000 m3/s
which is usually received in August.
The annual average discharge of the
Meghna at Bhairab Bazar is approximately
4,800 m3/s and the maximum flow occurs
generally around mid August.
The alluvial aquifer
systems of Bangladesh are some of
the most productive groundwater reservoirs.
The aquifer system generally consists
of three lithological units, an upper
silty clay and silt layer, a middle
layer of fine to very fine sand, and
a lower layer of fine to coarse sand
constituting the main aquifer. The
upper layer is usually 30 to 60 m
thick, the middle layer is about 20
m thick and lower aquifer is about
100 m thick. The transmissibility
of the main aquifer ranges from 500
to 2500 m2/day and the storage coefficient
varies from less that one percent
to 15 percent. At places water table
can be found within a few meters below
the ground surface. Bangladesh also
receives plenty of rainfall in the
monsoon extending from June to October.
The country receives
plenty of rainfall and the amount
of annual rainfall ranges from about
3200 mm in the northeast to about
1600 mm in the southwest region. Over
the annual cycle rainfall exceeds
evapotranspiration by about 10% in
the northeast and southeast region
whereas they are almost equal in northwest
and in the southwest evapotranspiration
exceeds rainfall by about 10%. During
the seven-month dry season extending
from November to May, evapotranspiration
is greater than average rainfall except
in the northeast region. Most of the
winter crops and some summer crops
can be grown under rain fed conditions.
Generally it can be said that Bangladesh
has plenty of water but its uneven
distribution, overabundance in monsoon
often causes catastrophic floods and
scarcity in dry season causes severe
drought conditions leading to loss
of crops, livestock, public health
problems and environmental degradation.
Availability
and demand:
Water is needed for
meeting consumptive demands, which
include agricultural, domestic and
industrial use and non-consumptive
demands which comprise in-stream use
(navigation, fisheries, salinity control,
dilution of pollution) and water required
for ecolological protection and wetland
preservation. For proper planning,
development and utilization of water
resources, correct assessment of available
water resources is essential but difficult.
Water becomes really a scarce resource
in Bangladesh during the dry months
of the year and maximum water demand
occurs in March. First assessment
of availability and demand of water
resources in the critical month of
March was made by the Master Plan
Organisation (now Water Resources
Planning Organisation) and presented
in the National Water Plan prepared
in 1986. In 1991 MPO updated the National
Water Plan together with the demand
and supply of water.
Gross water demand
is based on the irrigation requirement,
salinity control in the estuaries,
riverine fisheries, inland navigation,
fisheries and salinity control, and
domestic and industrial uses. There
are about 7.56 Mha (million hectare)
of cultivable land of which about
6.9 Mha of agricultural land can be
brought under irrigation at full development
by the year 2018. The total water
requirement has been estimated at
24,370 Mm3 (million cubic metre) which
includes 14,209 Mm3 for agriculture,
9,910 Mm3 for navigation and 170 Mm3
for domestic and industrial use.
The total water supply
in this month is 23,490 Mm3 which
comprises 5,360 Mm3 of groundwater,
6,390 Mm3 from regional rivers, beels
and haors and 11,740 Mm3 from main
rivers. Agricultural water requirement
is 58.6% of the total, navigation,
salinity control and fisheries demand
40.7% and domestic and industrial
need accounts for only 0.7% of total
demand. Out of these entire requirement,
77.2% is expected to be provided by
surface water and the balance 22.8%
is expected to come from groundwater.
Water balance, shown
in the Table, was estimated by the
MPO in 1991 for the month of March
for a 1983 benchmark year followed
by 1990 and the likely position in
the years 2005 and 2018. The year
2018 was contemplated as the projected
earlier possible date for full development
of the Ganges and Brahmaputra barrage
projects.
Water resources
| |
1983
|
1990
|
2005
|
2018
|
| Border
Inflows (m3/s): |
|
|
|
|
| Brahmaputra
|
3990
|
3900
|
3900
|
3800
|
| Ganges
|
870
|
770
|
836
|
836
|
| Tributary
Inflows (m3/s): |
|
|
|
|
| Measured
|
450
|
370
|
284
|
284
|
| Unmeasured
(net) |
480
|
790
|
480
|
480
|
| Total
Inflows (m3/s) |
5790
|
5830
|
5500
|
5400
|
| Diversions
(m3/s): |
|
|
|
|
| Normal
Diversions |
200
|
200
|
200
|
130
|
| New
pumps and improved offtakes
|
-
|
-
|
600
|
370
|
| Possible
diversions by barrage:
|
|
|
|
|
| from
Brahmaputra |
-
|
-
|
-
|
1000
|
| from
Ganges |
-
|
-
|
-
|
830
|
| Total
diversions (m3/s) |
200
|
200
|
800
|
2330
|
| Outflows
to the Bay of Bengal (m3/s) |
5590
|
5630
|
4700
|
3070
|
The water balance
shows that on an annual basis more
surface water flows through Bangladesh
into the Bay of Bengal than is needed
for all consumptive and non-consumptive
uses. In the benchmark year 1983,
the inflow of 3,990 m3/s of the Brahmaputra
river accounts for 69% of the total
inflow. The Ganges contributes about
15%. All other measured tributary
inflows account for only 7.7%, and
the unmeasured tributary inflows (net)
are estimated to be 8.3%.
The net unmeasured
inflows represent the summation of
all unmeasured inflows and outflow
to the system between Bahadurabad
on the Brahmaputra (about 80 km downstream
from the Indian border), Hardinge
Bridge on the Ganges (about 30 km
east of the Indian border) and Barura
just below the confluence of the two
rivers. By 2005 about 600 m3/s is
expected to be used by diversion into
existing canal system by pumps operating
12 hours per day. It would be possible
to divert 1830 m3/s by means of constructing
barrages in future over the Brahmaputra
and the Ganges rivers.
Realization of surface
water potential is constrained by
a number of factors although an immense
quantity of surface water flows through
Bangladesh. Most importantly there
are no opportunities for surface storage
and little scope for gravity diversion
without any barrages over the Brahmaputra
and the Ganges. Under the existing
conditions, annual outflows from these
two major rivers to the Bay of Bengal
are essentially equal to the inflows
from India.
Amount of present
diversion within Bangladesh is far
less the errors of measurement. A
water balance study for March, the
most critical dry month, indicates
that even relatively high abstraction
in this month for irrigation the net
diversion is about only 5% of the
inflows. Bangladesh has become increasingly
dependent on groundwater sources for
meeting irrigation needs. Farmers
have to use groundwater to grow Boro
rice in the winter when there is little
rainfall and that local rivers and
water bodies dries up. Tran-boundary
inflows of rivers are also diminishing
alarmingly due to progressively increasing
withdrawal in the upper riparian countries.
Water quality
Main sources of surface
water pollution are municipal sewage
and untreated industrial wastes that
are mostly discharged into rivers
and other water bodies. The worst
pollution is found in Buriganga river
at Dhaka mostly due to tannery wastes
and domestic sewage. Rivers near other
industrial towns like Khulna and Chittagong
have also become polluted. At places
dying industry is also causing serious
pollution. Excessive sediment load
of rivers also constitutes a water
quality problem because water is rendered
unsuitable for certain uses without
treatment.
In groundwater, presence
of iron is found in areas like Pabna,
Atghoria, Thakurgaon and Ashuganj.
This problem may usually be overcome
by sinking deeper tubewells. Arsenic
contamination, which was first detected
in groundwater in 1993, has created
widespread problem. Some 20 million
people are now considered at risk
due to consumption of groundwater
contaminated by arsenic. Severe problem
areas have been found in the southwest,
southeast and northeast regions of
the country. Government and a number
of international agencies are studying
the arsenic problem in order identify
the causes and remedial measures for
arsenic contamination. Efforts are
being made to filtering devices for
removal of arsenic without any success
yet. Only feasible option to save
the affected people is to stop drinking
groundwater and harness water from
alternative sources-surface water
and rainwater.
National
Water Plan
The first systematic
and comprehensive planning for water
resources development started in 1964
when a Master Plan was prepared by
the then East Pakistan Water and Power
development Authority (now Bangladesh
Water Development Board) with the
assistance of the International Engineering
Company of USA. The major emphasis
in the IECO Master Pan was on reducing
flood damages, which was a major articulated
national objective at that time. The
Master Plan has been described basically
as a massive scheme for flood embankment
construction, empoldering large areas
of the country into some 58 major
projects which would provide flood
protection and drainage facilities
to about 12 million acres and irrigation
facilities to about 8 million acres
by 1985.
The projects were
estimated to cost Rs 9960 million
(US$ 2,100 million, at an exchange
rate of Rs 4.75 to a dollar) over
a 21-year period ending in1985. Out
of this about Rs 4,226 million was
proposed to be spent by 1970 and Rs
7,846 million by 1975. Most of these
projects were implemented between
the mid 1960s and 1980s. Notable are
the Coastal Embankment project (protected
area 950,000 ha) completed in 1980,
the Brahmaputra Right Embankment Project
(225,900 ha) completed in 1970, Ganges-Kobadak
Irrigation Project (Phase-I to provide
kharif irrigation to 48,000 ha) completed
in 1970, and the Dhaka-Narayanganj-Demra
Irrigation scheme (4,000 ha now urbanized
due to expansion of Dhaka city) completed
in 1968.
In the 1965-70 five
year plan period EPWAPDA proposed
an extensive programme of infrastructure
development including the Chalan Beel
Project, Dhaka-Southwest, Chandpur
Irrigation Project, Karnafuli Irrigation
Project, Pabna Irrigation Project,
Meghna-Dhonagoda Irrigation project
and the Meghna-Muhuri transfer scheme
and almost all of these projects were
implemented in due course. In the
1980-1985 plan period, government
proposed a long-term water resources
development strategy and intended
to undertake the National Water Plan
(NWP) preparation in the plan period.
The National Water
Council (NWC) was constituted in February
1983 to guide and oversee the national
water resources planning activities.
The Master Plan Organisation (MPO)
was created at the same time and entrusted
with the task of preparation of the
NWP.
The first National
Water Plan was completed by MPO in
1986 and updated in 1991. In June
1992 MPO was renamed as the Water
Resources Planning Organisation (WARPO).
The severe floods of 1987 and 1988
drew widespread support from the international
community for the Flood Action Plan
(FAP) comprising 11 main and 15 supporting
studies aiming at water and flood
management strategies. The FAP studies
were completed over a period of 5
years from 1990 to 1995. Although
FAP was a large-scale study with the
contribution of a number of donors
under the coordination of the World
Bank and involvement of many international
and local consulting firms not much
was achieved in terms of concrete
plans except a Bangladesh Water and
Flood Management Strategy report prepared
in 1995 and revised in 1998. WARPO
again embarked on the preparation
of the National Water Management Plan
(NWMP) in March
1998 and completed
in March 2001 with four main components:
Development strategy
- a consensus document setting out
a consolidated goals and objectives,
and issues and options for the NWMP;
Water management
programme - a priority programme for
the period up to 2005, within the
context of a long-term programme up
to 2025, identifying and assessing
the structural and non-structural
measures to be implemented nationally
and for each region;
Investment portfolio
- national, regional and sub-regional
projects, as prepared by WARPO for
inclusion in the above programmes;
and
Ganges dependent
area studies - a review of the opportunities
arising after signing of the Ganges
Water Treaty with India in December
1996.
Other outputs of
the project include the National Water
Resources Database (NWRD), a People's
Participation and Consultation System,
procedures and criteria for WARPO
to act as a clearing house for water
sector projects, and reports on institutional
arrangements, legistaive reforms,
guidelines, regulatory and economic
instruments, as well as environmental
protection, management, monitoring
and evaluation.
National Water Policy
published in January 1999 is intended
to guide both public and private actions
to ensure optimal development and
management of water that will benefit
both individuals and society at large.
It attaches special importance to
the conjunctive use of ground and
surface water. Directions are provided
on such issues as river basin-wide
planning, water rights and allocation,
public and private involvement, public
investment, water supply and sanitation,
fisheries, navigation, agriculture,
industry and environment. The national
water policy sets following main objectives:
(i) to address issues
related, (ii) to ensure availability,
(iii) to accelerate development, (iv)
to bring necessary institutional,
and (v) to develop state of knowledge
and capability.
The Policy also underlies
the importance of effective institutions
and legal framework. The National
Water Resources Council (NWRC) provides
the means to oversee all water resources
management activities in the country
and the WARPO will act as the Secretariat
under the direction of the NWRC's
Executive Committee. Government is
also committed to revising the legislative
framework governing ownership, development,
appropriation, utilization, conservation
and protection of water resources
and to enact a National Water Policy
Code soon.
Ganges Water
Sharing Treaty
The treaty
between the Government of the Peoples
Republic of Bangladesh and the Government
of the Republic of India on sharing
of the Ganga/Ganges waters at
Farakka
was signed by the two Prime Ministers
on 12 December 1996. The treaty sets
out the following arrangement for
sharing between Bangladesh and India
the dry season flow of the Ganges
at Farakka by ten-day periods from
1 January to 31 May every year.
| Availability
at Farakka |
Share of
India |
Share of
Bangladesh |
| 70,000 cusecs
or less |
50% |
50% |
| 70,000-75,000
cusecs |
Balance of
flow |
35,000 cusecs
|
| 75,000 cusecs
or more |
40,000 cusecs
|
Balance of
flow |
The treaty makes
special provision for each country
to receive a guaranteed minimum of
35,000 cusecs on alternate ten-day
periods over six such periods during
March 11 to May 10. In the event flow
at Farakka
falls below 50,000 cusecs in any 10-day
period, the two Governments will enter
into immediate consultations to make
adjustments on an emergency basis,
in accordance with the principles
of equity, fair play and no harm to
either party. In the interim, India
shall release downstream of farakka
barrage, water at a rate not less
than 90% of Bangladesh's share until
such time as mutually agreed flows
are decided upon. Further India shall
limit abstraction of water downstream
of Farakka to a maximum of 200 cusecs.
The water sharing arrangement is based
on 40 years (1949-1988) 10-day period
average availability of water at Farakka.
Every effort would be made by the
upper riparian to protect flows of
water at Farakka as in the 40-years
average availability as mentioned
above.
The sharing arrangement
under the Treaty shall be reviewed
by the two Governments at five years
interval or earlier, as required by
either party adjustments, based on
principles of equity, fairness, and
no harm to either party made thereto,
if necessary. It would be open to
either party to seek the first review
after two years to assess the impact
and working of the sharing agreement
as contained in the Treaty
Source: Banglapedia,
National Encyclopedia of Bangladesh
Asiatic Society of Bangladesh