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Tubewells

Curse of copper

Issue Date: Mar 15, 2013

Arsenic control

Author(s): Nitya Jacob 
Issue Date: Nov 15, 2012

Double whammy

Issue Date: Oct 15, 2012
After killing its lifeline, the Bagmati, Kathmandu valley is extracting its groundwater to the last drop. But the quality of groundwater here is fast deteriorating due to lack of proper sewage disposal system and years of overexploitation, warn analysts.

Renal emergency

Issue Date: Sep 15, 2012
P G Jayasingha sat on his bed with a bloated stomach. Both his kidneys had failed and he was unable to pass urine. He could not drink water despite being thirsty. His arms and legs would constantly ache and his eyesight had failed him. That was in February when Down To Earth visited him.

A home-grown drought

Issue Date: Sep 15, 2009
Monsoon this year has failed most of India, causing drought in even well-irrigated and rainfed areas. Ravleen Kaur reports how our food preferences are making us vulnerable to drought

Mercury rises early

Issue Date: May 31, 2009
  Khurda is the worst affected in Orissa, with 10 sunstroke deaths reported PHOTOGRAPHS AGNIMIRH BASU

Emergency

Issue Date: Dec 31, 2004
A cruel summer has been left behind. Pipes are gurgling to life and the surge of water tankers on Chennai's streets is on the ebb. People and leaders are now free to discuss issues non-aqueous. There are even days when Chennai's papers skip the almost mandatory columns devoted to water. It is beguilingly close to good times.

The dark zone

Issue Date: Apr 15, 2003
It is a story about underground water: when the nectar turns into poison. When a daily task of drinking water from the handpump becomes the source of crippling disease and death. This is not a "natural" disaster -- where natural arsenic or fluoride, present deep down, just happened to make their way into drinking water. It is about a deliberate poisoning.

Water turns the tide

Author(s): Ankur Paliwal
Issue Date: Apr 15, 2011
Once-parched and barren Barmer is turning over a new leaf. About five years ago, Poona Ram, 45, shifted from this desert district of Rajasthan to Gujarat in search of work. He was unable to support his family at a place that could not give him employment. But Poona Ram returned. It was water that brought him back.

Letter

Issue Date: Sep 15, 2010
Tango with nature
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