
Abstract
This article examines the ever-existent problem of water scarcity in Rajasthan with a special focus on the district of Barmer, and its direly grave socio-economic implications on agriculture, health, and education. In their periods of water shortages, the systems and policy frameworks in place fail to uphold themselves perpetuating the unending cycle of poverty. Micro-irrigation, solar irrigation, and polyhouse production techniques have emerged as viable and sustainable solutions in addressing these problems. Similarly, these new technological advances and inlet-water management help agricultural production, income generation, as well as off-farm job creation in their own right. This study underscores the transformative potential of technology in mitigating Barmer’s water crisis and fostering socio-economic resilience.
1. Introduction
Scarcity of water has been a chronic problem in the district of Barmer along the Indo-Pak border. Barmer is Rajasthan’s second largest district and is important as a resource pool for metallurgical industries. Several immediate socio-demographic and economic repercussions of this glaring problem have been observed, such as but not limited to the rise in dropout rates, death caused by contamination among others. This constituency has long been beset by a number of environmental challenges, with water shortages being perhaps the most urgent among them.
2. On Ground Reality – The Case of Barmer
Barmer is among the most arid districts of Rajasthan that is experiencing perennial temperature and weather extremities. All such extreme conditions have profoundly affected the lifestyle of the inhabitants, from the formation of their habitations to their traditional costumes and cuisines. But in the district of Barmer these realities are stark as the local inhabitants, especially the womenfolk, take the harshest toll of the situation.
As per a survey conducted by the Human Welfare Foundation young girls of the family are forced to walk 2 km one way from their hutments (dhani) to bring merely a pot of water, a task which they had to perform nearly thrice a day, taking up more than 4-6 hours of their time daily.
The absence of consistent water supplies also takes a heavy toll on agriculture in the area. What further aggravates the situation is frequent crop failures plaguing the region. Most of the inhabitants depend on the scanty rainwater that infiltrates deep below the soil out of the reach of evaporation.
2.1 Financial Constraints
In such a situation, the residents are significantly reliant on deep wells which constitute the primary source of their drinking water. Each of these wells cost an estimated 1,25,000 rupees to be constructed, something which the local inhabitants could hardly afford to pay.
2.2 High Dropout Rates
The schooling of the youths also bears the brunt of the crisis as the rate of school dropout after primary schooling remains a staggering 98 percent .
3. State Level Implementational Failures and Delays
Though local effects of water scarcity are grim, systemic shortcomings like policy inefficiencies and political delays have also contributed to exacerbating the issue. ERCP (Eastern Rajasthan Canal Project), which has been planned to cater to the drinking and irrigation water requirements of vast tracts like Barmer, has suffered repeated postponements until in 2023, it was finally granted the status of a national project by the central government. However, even after tripartite
MoUs, central funds and support have been tardy, and local interest has been routinely sacrificed to cater to the demands of the neighbouring states.
Similarly, the Barmer Water Lift Canal Project, for example, was opened by the Congress regime in the state in 2003 and was scheduled to be completed by 2007. In 2003, however, the Bharatiya Janata Party regime in its first stint of power put the project on hold for nearly four years, only to restart work on it once again in 2007.
In addition to state-level infrastructure failures such as the ERCP and Barmer Water Lift Canal Project, another relevant example of political ineptitude can be found in the farmer loan waiver issue, which demonstrated how political interests have also influenced financial policies. Rajasthan saw massive farmer protests ahead of the state assembly elections in 2018, the then BJP-led government announced a loan waiver of upto Rs 50,000 to farmers holding up to two hectares of land.
Since a majority of farmers in the region hold five to 10 hectares of land, they did not receive waivers. Such a politically interest-driven approach towards policy formulation gives birth to naive policies, which Dr. Noam Angrist, a governance expert from the Blavatnik School of Government (University of Oxford) highlights it as ‘unrealistic’ and implemented without considering the actual condition of the target demographic.
Posted 22/01/2026