Mumbai rations water supply as June rainfall hits 12-year low

Mumbai faces its driest June in over a decade. Water supply to construction sites is cut. Industrial usage is reduced by 20%. Reservoir levels are critically low, holding only 40 days of water. This measure comes as Maharashtra receives significan...

PTI
Mumbai faces its driest June in over a decade. Water supply to construction sites is cut. Industrial usage is reduced by 20%
Mumbai: Grappling with its driest June in more than a decade, ​India's financial capital of Mumbai ​has cut water supply to construction sites and reduced industrial ​usage by 20% starting from Wednesday, as reservoir levels decline.

Mumbai, on the western coast of the country, is dependent on seven lakes outside the city for its water supply, and ‌they are now ⁠at ⁠10.35% of their total capacity, authorities said. That leaves the city of 13 million with ​just 40 days' worth of water.

Also Read: Water supply problems continue in Delhi; Yamuna's level at Wazirabad lower than required normal


As of Wednesday, authorities said water supply to all construction ​sites will be temporarily disconnected and new water connections for such sites will be put on hold.

Water supply to industrial, commercial establishments and sports clubs will ​also be cut by 20%, a statement from ⁠the city's ‌civic body said late on Tuesday. A 10% water cut was ​already imposed ​by authorities in mid-May.

The state of Maharashtra, of which Mumbai ⁠is capital, has received 75% lower rainfall than average ​in the first 16 days of June, a weather ​official said.
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Monsoon rains usually arrive over Mumbai in the first week of June, but they are expected at the end of the month this year.

"Usually in June, Mumbai receives pre-monsoon showers, and by mid-June the monsoon brings steady rainfall," the official said.

Also Read: Delhi to have online water analysers to counter water contamination; pilot project launched in Gulmohar Park

Most construction sites in Mumbai depend on commercial water ‌tankers for their supply, Sukhraj Nahar, the president of industry body CREDAI MCHI, told Reuters, adding that there was unlikely to be a major impact on business, ⁠since the monsoon was expected soon.
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"We will handle the situation for 10 days until the rains arrive. But where is the long term thinking?" Niranjan Hiranandani, one of the city's leading real estate developers and managing director of the Hiranandani Group, told Reuters.

India is facing its weakest monsoon in 11 years, spurring worries in markets and among consumers about lower harvests and higher food prices.
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