A quick recapitulation
In the last several chapters, we tried to decipher water
rights especially as applied to trans-boundary water sharing. We looked at the
elements of both the Indian water regime and international law.
However, we are still not close to determining what
Telangana's "fair share" of river waters, especially in the Krishna
basin, should have been. Indian law leaves the job of determining the
"fair share" to tribunals while this role is assigned to the Supreme
Court in the US. The methodology of doing so is to be decided by the
tribunal/court.
CWDT (volume III, page 6) summarizes the position: "No
doubt, the principle in respect of equitable apportionment of the water is
settled, but what shall be the equitable apportionment in respect of different
riparian States so far the water of such inter-State river is concerned is
itself a big question". GWDT (page 123) concurs: "There is no rigid
formula for the equitable apportionment of waters of a river. Each river system
has its own peculiarities".
Before embarking on a study of agreements, tribunal reports
and case law, it is useful to look at the hydrological factors. This will help us
understand these technical aspects better. This work therefore takes a
"hydrology detour" before returning to water law.
River basin
Most people understand (or believe they understand) rivers
quite well. However even this is not without controversy. In Kansas v. Colorado,
Colorado claimed the Arkansas is in fact two rivers and that its irrigators
were confined to the "Colorado Arkansas". Justice Brewer rejected the
contention and held it to be one river, even if it was "broken".
The nature of river systems (i.e. a river together with all
its components including tributaries) is more difficult but still within the
perception of "lay men". Understanding what constitutes a basin (sometimes
called river basin, river valley, drainage basin or catchment area) is more
complex and may require the assistance of experts.
Hydrologists are unanimous in their agreement that a basin
is an indivisible entity. Every basin is separated from the neighboring basins.
Every drop of stream runoff whether resulting from snowmelt or rainfall ends up
in the appropriate river system. Every square meter of land is necessarily a part of an appropriate basin and only
that one basin.
Basins, like contour lines, do not cross each other. Basin
boundaries are much more rigid than "real world" features like rivers
or "conceptual lines" like seashore. The fact that basins are not yet
accurately mapped can not change or distort this scientific position.
Basins are often divided into sub-basins. For instance,
Krishna sub-basins are labeled K-1 through K-12. These divisions do have a
physical connotation (and occasionally legal implications too) although the
primary purpose is convenience.
KWDT (volume I, page 98) goes into the nature of a basin at
great detail. KWDT cites WG Moore's Dictionary of Geography: "The entire area
drained by the river and its tributaries is called the river basin". KWDT
(on the same page) refers to a textbook on Applied Hydrology: "The river basin
is necessarily completely bounded by
the watershed or divide which separates it from other adjacent basins".
The tribunal accordingly ruled: "The expressions
"Krishna basin", "Krishna river basin" and "Krishna
drainage basin" used in this Report mean the entire area drained by the
Krishna river and its tributaries. The Krishna basin is bounded by the watershed
or divide which separates if from other adjacent basins".
This point is elaborated and reiterated as follows (in part
relying on HA Smith's The Economic uses of International Rivers):
"River basin an indivisible
physical unit. Each river basin is an indivisible physical unit, a more or less
self-contained unit of drainage.
Nature's laws treat the river and its tributaries as the arteries of a single
circulatory system. The surface streams converge, ever seeking a lower level
and unite to form one mainstream. All the waters that find their way towards a
common outlet form an interconnected and interdependent system, capable of
transmitting within itself any disturbance caused by changes affecting water in
any part of the basin. Water is a moving resource which implies that changes in
quality or quantity of water in one place may directly affect uses of water somewhere
else".
Basin vs. boundaries
Political boundaries are defined based on several
parameters. These often include social, cultural, economic factors etc. but almost
never consider hydrological factors.
Cartographers often use features like rivers or hills when
they draw maps. This stems partly from the fact such features are obstacles to
transport & movement. This is why rivers & streams often form
boundaries between districts, states or countries. The cartographic concept of
a "natural boundary" makes it much more likely that basins crisscross
political divisions.
The Supreme Court in the 1991 Cauvery presidential reference
stated "Though the waters of an inter-State river pass through the
territories of the riparian States such waters cannot be said to be located in
any one State".
KWDT observes (volume I, page 99): "Division of an
inter-State river by the boundaries of several States merely limits the
geographic limits of the authority of a given State; but unlike land resources
whose distribution among the States is resolved by the very establishment of
their boundaries, the water resources of the common river are not subjected to
automatic allocation among them by the delineation of their political frontiers".
Basin vs. command area
Because waters within a state are effectively at its
command, states distribute these based on their own requirements. This right is
recognized by all authorities. For example, KWDT final order Clause XV reads
"Nothing in the Order of this Tribunal shall impair the right or power or authority
of any State to regulate within its boundaries the use of water or to enjoy the
benefit of waters within that State in a manner not inconsistent with the Order
of this Tribunal".
States do not limit water use by basins. They base their
planning on the concept of command area (sometimes also called "culturable
command area") of a project. MoWR defines this as "the area which can
be irrigated from a scheme and is fit for cultivation".
The differences between the two concepts is summarized
below:
·
Command area is an administrative concept that
may have no hydrological or topographic connotation
·
Command area relates to a project while basin
relates to a river system
·
Every square meter of land is a part of one
basin or another. This is not true of command areas: due to several reasons
including government policies, a piece of land may not be a part of any
project's command area
·
A command area can crisscross two (or even more)
basins if the state resorts to trans-basin diversion
While the scientific definition of a basin is not questioned
by any authority, there is some occasional confusion among administrators. AP
quoting a couple of cases argued before KWDT that a basin includes "all
territories outside the river drainage basin to which the waters of the river
may be diverted and beneficially applied". In other words, AP tried to
club the basin & command area concepts. KWDT dismissed this "artificial definition" and
proceeded to present the correct situation detailed earlier. Trans-basin
diversion was held to be permissible "but those areas cannot be regarded as
parts of the river basin".
AP's "confusion" appears to persist. Before the
second Krishna Water Disputes Tribunal (KWDT-II), AP made (pages 796-800)
several contentions that indicate this:
·
A list of fluoride affected inhabitants cutting
across basin borders
·
Out of the seven proposed new schemes, three (Srisailam
Left Bank Canal, Kalwakurthy & Nettempaddu lift irrigation schemes)
totaling 77 TMC are within the Krishna basin. The other four projects totaling
150 TMC are trans-basin diversions
·
When requested for details of drought prone
areas, AP contended 67,650 sq. km including areas outside the basin. This is in
sharp contrast to Maharashtra & Karnataka who listed only the drought prone
areas within the Krishna basin (each state around 50,000 sq. km). Karnataka
disputed AP's claim and submitted an estimate of 45,493 sq. km based on
information obtained from AP. This led KWDT-II to record "The highest
drought prone area in Krishna basin is in the State of Karnataka whereas State
of Andhra Pradesh has smallest drought prone area in Krishna basin".
AP claimed its contention was based on KWDT statement (volume
II, page 8) "the relevant consideration is the interest of the State as a
whole and all its inhabitants and not merely the interest of the basin areas of
the State". This is untenable as the context was to the injury caused to a
state by the action of its riparian neighbors: "the crucial question is
whether the interest of the State or of any of its inhabitants in the waters of
the inter-State river and river valley is prejudicially affected by the action
of another State".
A reading of ISDA sections 3 & 3a will serve to confirm
the above:
"3. Complaints by State Governments as to water
disputes. appears to the Government of any State that a water dispute with the
Government of another State has arisen or is likely to arise by reason of the
fact that the interests of the State, or of any of the inhabitants thereof, in
the waters of an inter-State river or river valley have been, or are likely to
be, affected prejudicially by--
(a) any executive action or legislation taken or passed, or
proposed to be taken or passed, by the other State; or"
It may be noted that AP did not list the entire state
drought prone area 89,109 sq. km in its submission. This does not tally with
the purported understanding of "state as a whole".
From the above, it emerges AP continues to treat non-basin
areas benefitting from trans-basin diversions as a part of the basin. As this
contention flies in the face of both accepted science and practice as established
by tribunals, it may be concluded that the posturing reflects the state policy.
This approach is likely to have impacted the data provided by the state too.
Basins of Andhra Pradesh
SKC page 219 shows a basin map of AP together with district
boundaries. While this map's nature (raster) and scale is not amenable to
spatial database creation or analysis, it does provide some interesting
information based on a visual examination:
·
AP consists of 40 basins including 12
inter-state river systems
·
Khammam is spread in four basins: Godavari (#
20), Thammileru (# 22), Budameru (# 24) & Krishna (# 25)
·
With the exception of the small area in Khammam
covered by Thammileru & Budameru basins, the rest of Telangana is fully in
either Krishna or Godavari basins
·
Adilabad & Nizamabad districts are totally
in the Godavari basin
·
Mahabubnagar & Nalgonda districts are
totally in the Krishna basin
·
All other districts crisscross a minimum of two
basins
·
Contrary to intuitive perceptions, both Andhra
and Rayalaseema are largely outside the Krishna & Godavari basins
The map does have some shortfalls. For instance, it does not
delineate sub-basins. It also ignores AP's boundary with Pondicherry (Yanam)
and treats Yanam as a part of East Godavari district. This should not detract
from the fact the map is otherwise useful.
Andhra Pradesh basin areas
The publication Water Resources Statistical Abstract-2010
(WRSA-2010 or WRSA) published by AP's Irrigation & Command Area Development
(I&CAD) department lists (pages 25-26) lists each of the 40 basins with the
"catchment" area in the state. The total works out to 262,277 sq. km
i.e. 12,768 sq. km less than the
state's area!
The same publication (pages 21-22) 58 rivers flowing in the
state together with their "catchment" area in the state. The total
works out to 318,208 sq. km i.e. 43,163 sq. km more than the state's area!
While the reasons for these discrepancies is not readily
ascertainable, this is definitely a serious lapse not to be expected in a work
of this nature. It may be stressed here that WRSA appears to be the most
important source cited by various contenders including LSP.
In any case, WRSA does not provide region (or district) wise
breakup of the river basins. This information is available from KWDT & GWDT
reports. The reports provide basin area (in square miles) for each of the basin
districts as well as the proportion of the basin area in the district to the
entire district.
Converting at the rate of 1 mile= 1.61 km, KWDT's estimates
show that AP covers 76,313 sq. km of the Krishna basin. Telangana accounts for
52,274 sq., km i.e. 68.5% of the Krishna basin in the state. Similarly, GWDT
estimates show Telangana at 58,006 i.e. 79.2% of AP's 73,261 sq. km. These
percentages are widely quoted and so familiar to most people on both sides of
the debate.
However, a rather different picture emerges when one tries
to validate the tribunal data. Bellary district is shown to be entirely within
the Krishna district with an area of 9,915 sq. km whereas the district's
current area is only 8,450 sq. km. Khammam district's area after prorating
works out to around 11,925 sq. km against the current area of 16,029 sq., km
i.e. around 4,100 sq. km short. The area of East Godavari, in contrast, is
estimated at 14,967 sq., km, around 4,160 sq. km more than its present area.
On a careful examination of the discrepancies, I am led to believe
the tribunal data is based on a pre-1956 estimate. The East Godavari &
Khammam discrepancies are almost exact & opposite: this must be the area
transferred after 1956 to Khammam. The excess estimate of Bellary district
reflects the area transferred to AP in 1956. The other discrepancies are almost
certainly traceable to reorganization & other territorial transfers.
Andhra Pradesh basin distribution
As most of Telangana (with the exception of 561 sq. km in
two minor basins) is in Krishna & Godavari basins, I classified the AP
basins in three categories: Krishna, Godavari & "Others" (i.e.
all the 38 basins lumped together).
Srikakulam, Vizianagaram,
Prakasam, Nellore, Chittoor & Cuddapah
pose no problems as these districts entirely fall in the other basins. Nizamabad
& Adilabad are also easy as
these districts are entirely within the Godavari basin. Mahabubnagar
& Nalgonda are
similarly totally in the Krishna basin.
The districts
of Visakhapatnam & West
Godavari basins are also easy: I assume the GWDT estimate to be correct while
the rest of the districts fall in the other basins. The districts of Krishna
& Guntur were treated in a
similar manner assuming KWDT estimates to be accurate.
The case of the former Hyderabad district was not too
difficult either: I assumed the present Hyderabad district to be totally in the
Krishna basin and assigned the insignificant Godavari basin area to Ranga Reddy.
I resolved the East Godavari discrepancy by deducting the
excess GWDT estimate from its Godavari basin and allocating the balance to
other basins. I similarly resolved the Khammam discrepancy by assuming the
Krishna & other basin areas to be correct and assigning the balance to
Godavari basin.
In the case of Medak, I assumed KWDT estimate to be accurate
assigning the balance to Godavari basin. For Warangal, I took the opposite
route assuming GWDT estimate to be correct.
The only problem remaining was between Anantapur & Kurnool districts. Bellary district
ceded land to both in 1956 with no information on the exact extent. I assigned
the Krishna basin area transferred from Bellary to Anantapur. While this is not
factually correct, I had no other option as no information is available on
these territories. This error should not reflect too much on the study as both Anantapur
& Kurnool belong to the same
region.
The end result
is as follows:
·
Krishna basin: 77,721 sq. km with Telangana at
67.7% (52,587 sq. km)
·
Godavari basin: 72,787 sq. km with Telangana at 84.8%
(61,692 sq. km)
·
Other basins: 124,537 sq. km
"Rivers are not human artifacts; they are natural
phenomena, integral components of ecological systems, and inextricable parts of
the cultural, social, economic and spiritual lives of the communities
concerned. They are not pipelines to be cut, turned around, welded and rejoined":
R. Ramaswamy Iyer