बेबाक · Editorial
ಬಿಸಿಯಾದ ಹವಾಮಾನವು ಭಾರತದ ನೀರು ಮತ್ತು ಕೃಷಿಗೆ ಮೂಲಸೌಕರ್ಯ ಪರೀಕ್ಷೆಯಾಗುತ್ತದೆ.
ಎಫ್. ಎ. ಒ. ಯ ಎಲ್ ನಿನೊ ಎಚ್ಚರಿಕೆ, ಬರಿದುಹೋದ ಜಲಾಶಯಗಳು ಮತ್ತು 70 ಕೋಟಿ ಶಾಖದ ಅಪಾಯವು ಭಾರತದ ತೇವಾಂಶಭರಿತ ನೀರಾವರಿ ಮತ್ತು ಕೃಷಿ ಸುರಕ್ಷತಾ ಜಾಲವನ್ನು ಪೂರೈಸುತ್ತದೆ-ಹವಾಮಾನವೇ ಪ್ರಚೋದಕವಾಗಿದೆ, ಕಾರಣವಲ್ಲ.
ಒಂದು ಒಗ್ಗಟ್ಟು, ಕಾಕತಾಳೀಯವಲ್ಲ
ಎಚ್ಚರಿಕೆಗಳು ಏಕಕಾಲದಲ್ಲಿ ಹಲವಾರು ದಿಕ್ಕುಗಳಿಂದ ಬರುತ್ತಿವೆ. ಆಹಾರ ಮತ್ತು ಕೃಷಿ ಸಂಸ್ಥೆಯು ಎಫ್.
The trigger is not the cause
It is tempting to file each item under its own crisis — a weather story here, an irrigation story there. That filing is the error. A drained reservoir in Kandhamal, dredging on the Korapuzha halted since February 2026 after residents and political parties alleged illegal sand extraction under its cover, a lift-irrigation scheme in drought-prone Rayalaseema that one side says is 90% complete and still unfinished, and irrigation engineers needing to be directed by the Telangana Chief Minister to stay at project sites — these are not four accidents. They are symptoms of one condition: a water system asked to absorb shocks it was never upgraded to withstand. Climate is the trigger. The fragility — of canals, reservoirs, procurement and maintenance — is ours, and it is the part we can actually govern. A monsoon cannot be legislated; a repair calendar can.
Two ledgers, both honest
Fairness demands both sides be stated at full strength. On one side, the state is visibly building. The new crest gates of the Tungabhadra reservoir, described as a lifeline for people across four districts of Karnataka, Andhra Pradesh and Telangana, are ready for inauguration. Goa's Promotion of Vegetable with Assured Market Scheme has paid ₹27.83 crore to more than 6,200 farmers over five years, with vegetable procurement more than doubled. Bihar is laying foundation stones for an aqua park, with carp and catfish hatcheries and biofloc systems, to widen farm incomes. On the other side stands a ledger of neglect and mistrust: reservoirs running dry, projects contested near completion, dredging suspended after public protest. Both ledgers are true, and an honest accounting refuses to read only one of them.
The cost of waiting
The strongest case for caution is real. Reservoirs, canals and procurement systems cannot be rebuilt overnight, and public money must be spent with discipline; a State facing heat in one district and heavy rain in another must ration its attention. Yet the opposing case is stronger. Delay carries its own cost, and it is rarely paid by those who choose it. When a reservoir empties in Kandhamal, it is the marginal farmer who reaches the brink first. At the Eluru Collectorate, farmers, small traders and artisans have protested to recover gold pledged against loans at Bank of Baroda, alleging misappropriation by bank officials. That is a reminder that rural distress is financial as much as climatic. A climate shock finds the weakest joint and breaks it there.
The considered verdict
The judgment is neither triumph nor despair, but concern with a deadline. India is not short of schemes, gates or foundation stones; it is short of maintenance, completion and accountability in the long gap between the cloud and the field. A reservoir under stress, a project alleged to be 90% done and still awaiting remaining work, a procurement scheme that works in one State but is not yet a template elsewhere — these are governance failures wearing a weather costume. The FAO's El Nino warning is, in effect, a notice period. The institutions that store and move water still have time to act, but volatility is rising faster than repair, and that widening gap is precisely where the next crisis will form.
A way forward that holds
The path is unglamorous and entirely feasible. First, treat maintenance as infrastructure: a published repair calendar for every major reservoir, with engineers held to presence at site, not merely to ceremony at inauguration. Second, finish what is begun — a lift-irrigation project said to be near completion is a liability until it delivers water, not a credential to be banked across political transitions. Third, study what demonstrably works: a scheme that paid ₹27.83 crore to more than 6,200 farmers deserves scrutiny for replication, not isolation in one State. Fourth, publish district-level water-risk dashboards before each monsoon and climate-proof rural credit, so a bad season does not end in a fight over pledged gold. The monsoon will do what it will; the republic's task is to ensure the system does not fail with it.
ಒತ್ತಡದಲ್ಲಿರುವ ಜಲಾಶಯ ಮತ್ತು ಶೇಕಡಾ 90ರಷ್ಟು ಪೂರ್ಣಗೊಂಡಿದ್ದರೂ ಅಪೂರ್ಣವಾಗಿರುವ ಯೋಜನೆಯು ಹವಾಮಾನದ ವೇಷಭೂಷಣವನ್ನು ಧರಿಸಿ ಆಡಳಿತದ ವೈಫಲ್ಯಗಳಾಗಿವೆ.
At stake is whether climate-stressed water and farm infrastructure can protect life, equality, environmental stewardship and effective remedies under Articles 21, 14, 48A and 32.
Climate Water Accountability Law
Parliament and State legislatures should enact a model Climate Water Infrastructure Accountability law requiring every major reservoir, canal, dredging and lift-irrigation project to publish an annual repair calendar, safety audit, water-availability status and grievance record under mandatory RTI disclosure. The law should create an independent state-level Water Infrastructure Ombudsman, with farmer and resident access, empowered to hear complaints on stalled works, suspected illegal extraction, procurement failures and emergency maintenance delays within fixed statutory timelines.
ನಿಮ್ಮ ಸಾಂವಿಧಾನಿಕ ಹಕ್ಕುಗಳು
ಈ ಕಥೆಯಲ್ಲಿ ಸಂವಿಧಾನವು ಏನು ಭರವಸೆ ನೀಡುತ್ತದೆ?The State shall endeavour to protect and improve the environment and safeguard forests and wildlife.
Directive PrincipleNo person shall be deprived of life or personal liberty except by a fair, just and reasonable procedure established by law — read by the courts to include dignity, privacy, health, a clean environment and livelihood.
Fundamental RightThe right to move the Supreme Court directly to enforce fundamental rights — called by Dr Ambedkar "the heart and soul of the Constitution." The courts can issue writs such as habeas corpus and mandamus.
Fundamental RightThe State shall not deny any person equality before the law or the equal protection of the laws. Like must be treated alike; the law cannot be arbitrary.
Fundamental RightWhat this editorial rests on
Drawn from our live multi-newsroom feed — read the reporting at source.
ಚಳವಳಿಯಲ್ಲಿ ಪಾಲ್ಗೊಳ್ಳಿ.
ಒಂದು ಸಮಯದಲ್ಲಿ ಒಂದು ನಿರ್ಭೀತರ ಸಂಪಾದಕೀಯ-ನಿಮ್ಮ ಭಾಷೆಯಲ್ಲಿ. ಜೊತೆಗೆ ಅನುಸರಿಸಬೇಕಾದ ಸಾಂವಿಧಾನಿಕ ಕೋರಿಕೆ.
An editorial is the considered opinion of The Mudda desk, argued from the sourced reporting above and written under our published persona, बेबाक. We name institutions and actors; we do not endorse or attack any political party. "The Mudda's Ask" is a citizen's good-faith policy proposal, grounded in the Constitution — not the platform of any party. Translations are faithful — no fact is added in any language. If we are wrong, we will say so. How we work →