Maharashtra: How fetching water is holding back India's women (2024)

ByAnagha Pathak,BBC Marathi

Maharashtra: How fetching water is holding back India's women (1)Maharashtra: How fetching water is holding back India's women (2)BBC/MANGESH SONAWANE

Fetching drinking water is a gruelling daily routine for millions of women in India.

Even without enduring the scorching summer months or the freezing winters, they walk for miles every day, balancing plastic or earthen pots on their heads and carrying buckets in their hands to manage the household water stock.

“It’s a daily struggle. I get so tired that I collapse when I’m done,” says Sunita Bhurbade from Tringalwadi, a tribal village 180km (112 miles) from India’s financial hub, Mumbai.

Ms Bhurbade spends four-to-five hours every day travelling back and forth from her nearest reliable water source - a dry lake - to fill her pots. The water is dirty and she has to dig holes on the side for the water to filter through naturally and seep in.

“For four-to-five months every year, women have no option but to fetch water from long distances because nearby wells and water sources dry up,” she says. Ironically, her village receives one of the heaviest rainfalls in the region.

Because of this daily grind, she constantly complains of back and neck pain, fatigue and weakness.

The daily rigour also bars her and other women from her village from pursing a paid job.

“No-one will hire me even as a farm labourer because they won’t allow me to show up at work in the afternoon,” she says.

"If I go after water, I have to sacrifice my livelihood. If I try to earn a wage, my family stays thirsty.”

Maharashtra: How fetching water is holding back India's women (3)Maharashtra: How fetching water is holding back India's women (4)Getty Images

According to a 2023 report by the World Health Organisation (WHO) and Unicef, 1.8 billion people worldwide collect drinking water from supplies located off premises, and in seven out of 10 households, women and girls are primarily responsible for water collection.

This is particularly true in India where, experts say, the need to secure drinking water is holding women back and hindering economic growth.

“First, women can’t take up paid work because they have to do all the household chores and secondly, even if they wish to find some work after doing their daily chores, there are not enough paid jobs for women in rural India," says Prof Ashwini Deshpande, who heads the economics department in Delhi's Ashoka University.

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The value of women’s unpaid labour in Indian economy is huge. India’s largest commercial bank State Bank of India (SBI)’s Ecowrap report indicates that the total contribution of unpaid women's work to the economy is around 22.7 trillion rupees ($276.8bn; £216.7bn), almost 7.5% of India’s total GDP.

The NGO International Development Organisation estimates that Indian women spend 150 million work days every year fetching water.

Experts say that if women can spend this time in paid activities, they can be financially independent and it can also boost the economy.

The Indian government says it is constantly working to improve water infrastructure countrywide. By January 2024, it said it had provided piped water to almost 74% of rural households.

For those who had to earlier fetch water from outside but are now getting piped water in their homes, the experience has been life-changing.

“I open the tap, water comes rushing… it’s like a dream. I had been fetching water since I was five,” says Mangal Khadke, who’s married and in her 30s and lives about 30km from Ms Bhurbade.

But there are still millions who lack access to tap water.

Maharashtra: How fetching water is holding back India's women (5)Maharashtra: How fetching water is holding back India's women (6)Getty Images

Around 700km away from Tringalwadi, in the Aaki village of central India’s Amaravati district, village head Indrayani Javarkar spends most of her day finding and collecting water.

“It’s so dry here in the summer that every day I wake up with one thought in my mind: where can I find water today?” she says.

Indrayani has two jobs: first, find and collect water for her family, and second, to organise water tankers for her village.

"Both the tasks are getting harder every day," she says.

Ms Bhurbade says getting tap water for her is still a distant dream.

“[Women] start when they are children themselves. Someone hands them a small bucket and says, fetch what you can carry. And then, it’s a lifetime's obligation - until she dies, she is fetching water," she says.

Ms Bhurbade doesn’t remember a single year where she didn’t have to walk miles with a pot on her head.

We asked what she would do if she didn’t have to fetch water and had spare time.

She thinks hard and says she likes to sing. But her songs are also about water.

"Radu nako bala mi panyala jate," she sings for us.

It means: "Don’t cry my child, I am going to fetch water."

Women's rights

India

Water

Maharashtra: How fetching water is holding back India's women (2024)

FAQs

Maharashtra: How fetching water is holding back India's women? ›

Fetching water is one of the chores that millions of women in India do; however, this is holding them back and hampering economic growth. A report by the World Health Organisation (WHO) and UNICEF states that in "seven out of 10 households, women and girls are responsible for water collection."

What are the water challenges in Maharashtra? ›

Per capita water availability is decreasing due to ever increasing population. Also, due to rising food demands, rapid industrialization and urbanization the stress on water management is increasing. As an effect water management has emerged as one of the 21st century's grand challenges.

How Indian households get their drinking water? ›

The most recent such data comes from the 78th round of the survey, conducted in 2020-21, where over a million people across all states were surveyed. Hand pumps or tube wells are the single largest source of drinking water for rural Indians, while piped water is the biggest source for urban Indians.

What is the water dispute in Maharashtra? ›

The Krishna Water Dispute centers on the equitable sharing of Krishna River waters among the states of Maharashtra, Karnataka, Telangana, and Andhra Pradesh.

What is the main source of water in Maharashtra? ›

The State is mainly covered by the basins of Krishna, Godavari and Tapi except the west-flowing rivers of Konkan strip. A small portion on north comes under Narmada basin. The major rivers, which flow through Maharashtra state are Godavari, Krishna and Tapi.

What are the challenges of water in Mumbai? ›

The city's water management system faces challenges due to rising demand and limited water sources. The Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation (BMC) usually plans so as to have enough water stock until the end of July, expecting the rains to begin in early June.

What are the challenges of water resources in India? ›

India lacks proper water management systems, with inefficient irrigation systems, leaky water supply networks, and insufficient wastewater treatment facilities. Climate change has resulted in irregular monsoon patterns and increased frequency of natural disasters, causing further strain on India's water resources.

What is the water availability in Maharashtra? ›

The estimated average-annual availability of water resources consist of 164 km3 of surface water and 20.5 km3 of subsurface water. In Maharashtra, of the 5 river basin systems, only 55% of the dependable yield is available in the four river basins (Krishna, Godavari, Tapi and Narmada) east of the Western Ghats.

What is the main water divide of Maharashtra? ›

Sahyadri is the western boundary of the Deccan plateau. It forms a major watershed of the Indian peninsula. Sahyadri is the major water divider of the Konkan rivers. ​Sahyadri separates the drainage basin of the East flowing and West flowing rivers.

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