The health-crisis occasioned
nation-wide lockdown is yet to be lifted. However, one need not be a
rocket-scientist to decipher that the Indian economy is in shambles and
economic outlook for the entire financial year has already received a
battering. The silver lining is that the event has shaken up fixated notions to
an extent that nothing seems impossible. Translated in economic terms, the
projects which earlier appeared impractical, in a role-reversal, can become the
order of the day, especially bold and gigantic economic projects. This article
implores on one such ultra-mega project which is capable of pioneering economic
activity across a variety of sectors and simultaneously generating massive
employment opportunities, equally for the white-collar and the blue-collar.
Desalinate sea-water and supply it to the hinterlands. Neither from the look or
sound of it this project appears to quench the quest for such big-bang reform.
However, as is demonstrated here, the time for ripe for its implementation.
There are international examples
where huge regions survive solely on desalinated sea-water. In fact, countries
like Kuwait, Israel, almost exclusively source potable water from the
desalination process. The proliferation of this technology is also rampant across
large regions, such as and Singapore, California, Perth, etc. A 2015 paper
published in the MIT Technology Review made a compelling case to highlight that
seawater desalination is perhaps the only futuristic response to the growing
demand for potable water. Massive investment and economic costs are cited to reject
forward movement in this direction. However, those very reasons which earlier worked
for repelling the proposal, now make it an irresistible choice.
It is a known fact that
desalinating sea water to make it potable is an expensive proposition. This is
exactly why this idea is worth doing in today’s economic paradigm as it, let’s
call it the desalination project, shall entail huge investments by the
Government in diverse sectors. Firstly, in solar energy front, by establishing
floating solar panels across vast stretches of oceans to energise the
desalination process. This will also mean consistent demand for electricity,
and thus translate into economies-of-scale for this struggling industry. Secondly,
massive demand build-up for cement, iron and steel and other infrastructure
goods, needed for laying down huge pipelines across State frontiers for
transporting treated sea-water. Such pipelines already exist for oil and
natural gas, and thus there are precedents. Thirdly, linking the desalination
project with the ongoing inter-linking of rivers will spur the demand across
other related sectors. The scope of inter-linking process can be expanded by including
within its ambit dredging of dried up distributaries, desilting the existing
water-channels and provisioning smaller canals to ensure that the desalinated water
reaches every local area.
The desalination project has
massive potential to further integrate the topographical spread and reduce
regional inequities. For example, treated water from the coast of Gujarat can
be brought to drier States, such as Rajasthan, Haryana, Delhi and others in
North India. Similarly treated water from West Bengal can be brought to parched
areas in eastern states like Bihar, Jharkhand, etc. Desalinated water from
Odisha would supplement the water requirement for MP and Jharkhand, etc. Furthermore,
areas with acute water shortage within the coastal States, such as Maharashtra,
Andhra, Karnataka, Tamil Nadu, etc. can be supplied water from the desalinated
plant within their respective States. Calibrated through dedicated SPVs across
different regions, working in tandem with municipalities and other local
bodies, to finetune the supply network, an all-India level desalination project
augers well with the flagship program of the Union Jal Shakti Ministry
to provide clean drinking water till the last mile.
Considering its sheer size, the
desalination project will generate massive employment opportunities. Whether it
be by collaborating in public-private partnership, or by the public health
department in form of large-scale recruitment of engineers (across various
streams), construction workers, besides wide-ranging allied occupation and
fields, there will be an overwhelming demand for both skilled and unskilled
manpower.
A crucial challenge in the design
would be ensuring that the desalination project is not rendered cyclic and
instead operates perennially, across the year, though in suitable moderation
tied up to the seasonal rains. One way to achieve this, which can also reduce
the costs to some extent, is by feeding the seasonal rivers and canals with the
pipelines, which will ultimately converge in the mainstream rivers. This will
ensure that the traditional irrigation channels are not disturbed, while at the
same time supplementing the water-flow in the rivers, thus addressing the
vagaries of monsoon. At the cost of repetition, pursued alongside interlinking
of rivers, the desalination project can be modelled in a fashion that dedicated
water-hubs are created across the length and breadth of the country which will
obviate water-related regional disparities.
The desalination project is
replete with positive after-effects. Perennial and assured water-supply will render
moot the crop-failures linked to irrigation woes. In fact, this will permit multiple
crop plantations across the year, thereby, also in a sense addressing the
target of doubling farmer income. Arid regions and depleting green cover, would
also be unwitting beneficiaries.
Before embarking on such a
project, however, it must be unfailing appreciated by the policy-makers that there
cannot be any half-hearted attempts in such expeditions. At any rate massive projects
like nation-wide desalination cannot be undertaken, not even in parts, by private
players or even large corporations. This is so on account of huge investments
which are required coupled with lack of immediate and attractive returns, which
are necessary to excite private participation. This does not imply that the
project should be entirely undertaken by the Government as part of its
socio-welfare obligations. Instead, multiple avenues should be created to
obtain benefit of private initiative and expertise by suitable revenue
modelling of the various parts of the grand design. Nonetheless the Government
will have to be the lead driver in this strive to push desalination.