In Late
Oct, I had visited Delhi to attend Water Aid’s Jal Choupal initiative. Jal
Choupal as it translates is “Water Platform”, where different users and
decision makers of water can come together to discuss their needs, issues and decide
strategies to manage water. While it looks amazing as an initiative, I would
like to attend one of these Jal Choupal at Village level to understand it and talk
more about it. I say this because, it is
a challenging task with myriad of institutions at a village level and everyone wants people to be
part of it.
After this
event, I headed to Kanpur, where I was asked if I can conduct Rainwater Harvesting (RWH)
training session by INREM Foundation for a local NGO working in Kanpur district. I accepted as I have been
working on an ongoing RWH project for several government schools in rural
Bangalore and have a few learnings about it, especially about the importance of
plumber.
I land up
in the office of the local NGO in Kanpur and spontaneously ask the Project Director, “Is
the plumber coming along?” He paused and replied, “We don’t have any plumber
coming with us”. I insisted for a plumber and then he made calls to find one soon.
It was unusual
response to me, but for many people with whom I later discussed RWH isn’t a
popular response yet. The proximity to mighty Ganga and handpumps (which is a major
source of the water needs in villages). These handpumps are preferred over
plenty of open wells, (check pics) which have immense potential for recharge and storing water.
We reached
the project site, which is a village in Kakupur Sitaram Gram Panchayat in
Shivrajpur block of Kanpur district. There was one local plumber, who didn’t go
to the nearby town for work, like all others did that day (lucky for us)
I decided
to use the latest manual on Rainwater Harvesting that Biome had co-developed in
association with a Bangalore based Navyadisha Trust with the support of Grameen
Koota. This manual is very comprehensive as it comes with detailed illustrations
(this was Kantesh’s, the Artist first project on water and sanitation) along
with the required technical details for RWH for drinking and non-drinking
purposes. Check out the pics of the manual
I went along
with the plumber to the one of the houses selected for RWH. I explained the steps
involved in RWH to the plumber and showed the manual for more specific details.
On asking whether he could understand, he replied “ I have understood
things like PVC pipe, Elbow, T Joint, Y Joint, Clamps shown in these pictures.
It is helpful in understanding the RWH process”. But he believed that he would
need to build few such structures to understand it much better.
Explaining the team and plumber about RWH |
Even the field team
at the NGO praised the manual for its details and illustrations (seen above). They wanted a
Hindi version of the manual. I told them, it should be done soon.
I was there
for 3 days, explaining the members of the NGO and the plumber about RWH, after they
came back with specific questions. The team decided to go for Varun filter (made
of contents like sand, sponge, pebbles placed in a 100 liters sintex tank), two
220 liters sintex tank connected together and a recharge pit as part of their designed
“Ghar Ghar Aakash Ganga” Program.
While I was
there, the implementation of the project could not start due to various reasons.
I received these pics of the system, one completed and another in progress.
The Completed RWH system |
Ongoing implementation of RWH system |
I left with
them, the importance of the role of the plumber in building RWH system and how it could generate
livelihood for them, which the members at the NGO acknowledged.
Kiran Kumar Sen
Biome Trust and Wipro Sustainability Seeding Fellow
kirankumarsen@gmail.com