Skip to main content

Not just Indore: Urban rivers and lakes turning toxic in Madhya Pradesh

By Raj Kumar Sinha* 
Most major cities of Madhya Pradesh—Bhopal, Jabalpur, Gwalior, Ujjain and Sagar—depend directly or indirectly on rivers, lakes and groundwater for drinking water. All these sources are under increasing pressure from urban sewage, industrial waste and solid garbage. Sewage treatment plants are either inadequately designed or, in many cases, completely non-functional. As a result, partially treated or untreated sewage flows directly into water bodies.
The National Green Tribunal (NGT), based in Bhopal, recently acknowledged that serious risks of water contamination exist not only in Indore, but in other major cities of the state as well. The remark points not only to administrative failures but also raises deep questions about the model of urban water governance in Madhya Pradesh. The NGT’s comments come at a time when urban populations are expanding rapidly, yet sewage treatment, solid waste management and water protection systems have failed to grow in proportion. The continuous discharge of untreated municipal sewage and industrial effluents into rivers, lakes and aquifers has turned into a permanent threat.
The Tribunal observed that inadequate treatment of urban sewage, unregulated disposal of industrial waste and the absence of regular monitoring of water sources are intensifying the crisis. It directed the state government and urban local bodies to ensure water quality, strengthen sewage treatment capacity and prioritise public health.
This is not a stray administrative lapse or a one-off accident, but an indication of a deep structural crisis across most urban centres of Madhya Pradesh. For cities dependent on rivers, lakes and groundwater, the warning is clear: the danger is no longer at the doorstep—it has already entered the home.
In Jabalpur, the Narmada River is vital for religious, cultural and drinking purposes. Yet large parts of the city discharge sewage directly into the Narmada or its tributary drains. At several locations sewage channels merge into the river without any treatment. During the monsoon, the situation worsens when storm runoff carries waste directly into the river. Despite this, official claims that the Narmada remains “clean” do not match conditions on the ground.
A historical Gond-era lake in Jabalpur, once an important water storage and groundwater recharge source, now stands as a symbol of neglect and administrative apathy. Much of the lake has filled up with garbage, plastic and domestic waste, turning a valuable water body into a virtual dumping ground. This is not merely an ecological or aesthetic issue—it is a direct public health emergency. The accumulated waste breeds mosquitoes, foul odour and water-borne diseases. For neighbourhood residents, the lake has become a source of illness rather than relief. Its neglect reflects a wider indifference toward water bodies across the city. In a city where the Narmada is the lifeline, allowing lakes to decay pushes Jabalpur closer to a future water crisis.
In Gwalior, small rivers and drains near the city have become conduits for untreated wastewater. Due to insufficient sewage treatment infrastructure, waste flows directly into rivers and ponds, degrading water quality. At the same time, groundwater levels across Gwalior division are falling rapidly because most extraction happens through borewells and tubewells. Some localities in Gwalior receive no piped water for months, forcing residents to rely on bottled water and tankers. This reflects a weakened water supply network and governance failure. Citizens in the region now suffer simultaneously from water scarcity and water contamination.
The Malwa region has long been known for the saying “pag-pag roti, dag-dag neer”—bread at every step, water at every turn. Indore, in particular, once relied on its network of stepwells, wells and tanks. Over time, as traditional water systems were ignored, dependence on the Narmada water pipeline projects increased. It is also a fact that, to secure a loan from the Asian Development Bank (ADB), the city's public water supply system was deliberately portrayed as “failing” so that privatisation could be pushed through under public-private partnership conditions.
The loan conditions required that various components of water supply be handed to private operators—distribution, billing, revenue collection, operation and maintenance, metering and more. This included laying off municipal staff. In return, citizens were sold the dream of 24x7 water supply. The government’s role has been reduced to that of a regulator. Accountability of municipalities and local bodies is weakening. Private companies remain outside the ambit of the Right to Information Act, reducing transparency. Citizen grievance redressal has also become slow and complicated.
Privatisation of water in Madhya Pradesh is not merely a policy choice; it raises questions of social justice and democratic rights. The critical question is this: where is the monitoring system of municipal corporations and the administration?
---
*Bargi Dam Displaced and Affected Association

Comments

TRENDING

The soundtrack of resistance: How 'Sada Sada Ya Nabi' is fueling the Iran war

​ By Syed Ali Mujtaba*  ​The Persian track “ Sada Sada Ya Nabi ye ” by Hossein Sotoodeh has taken the world by storm. This viral media has cut across linguistic barriers to achieve cult status, reaching over 10 million views. The electrifying music and passionate rendition by the Iranian singer have resonated across the globe, particularly as the high-intensity military conflict involving Iran entered its second month in March 2026.

Kolkata dialogue flags policy and finance deficit in wetland sustainability

By A Representative   Wetlands were the focus of India–Germany climate talks in Kolkata, where experts from government, business, and civil society stressed both their ecological importance and the urgent need for stronger conservation frameworks. 

Beyond Lata: How Asha Bhosle redefined the female voice with her underrated versatility

By Vidya Bhushan Rawat*  The news of iconic Asha Bhosle’s ‘untimely’ demise has shocked music lovers across the country. Asha Tai was 92 years young. Normally, people celebrate a passing at this age, but Asha Bhosle—much like another legend, Dev Anand—never made us feel she was growing old. She was perhaps the most versatile artist in Bombay cinema. Hailing from a family devoted to music, Asha’s journey to success and fame was not easy. Her elder sister, Lata Mangeshkar, had already become the voice of women in cinema, and most contemporaries like Shamshad Begum, Suraiya, and Noor Jehan had slowly faded into oblivion. Frankly, there was no second or third to Lata Mangeshkar; she became the first—and perhaps the only—choice for music directors and all those who mattered in filmmaking. Asha started her musical journey at age 10 with a Marathi film, but her first break in Hindustani cinema came with the film "Chunariya" (1948). Though she was not the first choice of ...

Maoist activity in India: Weakening structures, 'shifts' in leadership, strategy and ideology

By Harsh Thakor*  Recent statements by government representatives have suggested that Maoism in India has been effectively eliminated, citing the weakening of central leadership and intensified security operations. These claims follow sustained counterinsurgency efforts across key regions, including central and eastern India. However, available information from security agencies and independent observers indicates that while the organizational structure of the CPI (Maoist) has been significantly disrupted, elements of the movement remain active. Reports acknowledge the continued presence of cadres in certain forested regions such as Bastar and parts of Dandakaranya, alongside smaller, decentralized units adapting their operational strategies.

'Fraudulent': Ex-civil servants urge President to halt Odisha tribal land dispossession

By A Representative   A collective of 81 retired civil servants from the Constitutional Conduct Group has written to the President of India expressing alarm over what they describe as the wrongful dispossession of tribal lands in Odisha’s Rayagada district. The letter, dated April 19, 2026, highlights violent clashes in Kantamal village where police personnel reportedly injured over 70 tribal residents attempting to protect their community rights. 

From Manesar to Noida: Workers take to streets for bread, media looks away

By Sunil Kumar*   Across several states in India, a workers’ movement is gathering momentum. This is not a movement born of luxury or ambition, nor a demand for power-sharing within the state. At its core lies a stark and basic plea: the right to survive with dignity—adequate food, and wages sufficient to afford it.

Dhandhuka violence: Gujarat minority group seeks judicial action, cites targeted arson

By A Representative   The Minority Coordination Committee (MCC) Gujarat has written to the Director General of Police seeking judicial action in connection with recent violence in Dhandhuka town of Ahmedabad district, alleging targeted attacks on properties belonging to members of the Muslim community following a fatal altercation between two bike riders on April 18.

Midnight weeping: The sociology of tragic vision in Badri Narayan’s poetry

By Ravi Ranjan*  Badri Narayan, a distinguished Hindi poet and social scientist, occupies a unique position in contemporary Indian intellectual life by bridging the worlds of creative literature and critical social inquiry. His poetic journey began significantly with the 1993 collection 'Saca Sune Hue Kaï Dina Hue' (Truth Heard Many Days Ago). As a social historian and cultural anthropologist, Narayan pioneered a methodological shift away from elite archives toward the oral traditions and folk myths of marginalized communities. He eventually legitimized "folk-ethnography" as a rigorous academic discipline during his tenure as Director of the G.B. Pant Social Science Institute.  

Why link women’s reservation to delimitation? The unspoken political calculus

By Vikas Meshram*  April 16, 2026, is likely to be recorded as a special day in the history of Indian democracy. In a three-day special session of Parliament, the central government is set to introduce a comprehensive package of three historic bills: the Constitution (131st Amendment) Bill, 2026; the Delimitation Bill, 2026; and the Union Territories Laws (Amendment) Bill, 2026. The stated purpose of all three is the same: to implement the Nari Shakti Vandan Adhiniyam (106th Constitutional Amendment) passed in 2023. However, the political intent concealed behind these measures — and their impact on the federal balance — is far more profound. It is absolutely essential to understand this.