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The HinduApril 14, 2026

Parched again: On Bengaluru’s drinking water woes

While Karnataka as a whole is improving its water security, Bengaluru is dealing with extreme groundwater withdrawal. The State drew 66% of the groundwater that it could sustainably extract in 2025, but Bengaluru East Taluka drew 378%. The sustainably extractable volume of groundwater is based on how much withdrawal will deplete the aquifer, so while 378% does not mean Bengaluru East has depleted its groundwater, it is reminiscent of an ongoing crisis that has, once again, turned acute. The Bengaluru region lies on crystalline rock that already stores little water and recharges slowly. The city further concentrates demand in areas with higher population density and per-capita consumption, including ‘tech parks’ and apartment complexes. The built-up area of such urban infrastructure also suppresses recharge by percolating rainwater. A growing fraction of the population depends on water from the Cauvery, which comes with a high expansion cost. Thus, the problem has a natural basis but has been compounded over the years by inconsiderate urbanisation, where the costs — monetary and, increasingly, existential — are being passed on to the populace.

In 2024, a weak monsoon left nearly half of Bengaluru’s 14,000 borewells dry. The government launched a project to supply 775 million litres per day to 110 villages and lower groundwater stress. But to date, the project has achieved only midway coverage, leaving many residents still banking on tankers. A 2026 study found that the crisis has since moved to Koramangala and Hebbal. The Bangalore Water Supply and Sewerage Board has also been using treated sewage water to recharge lakes. It seems Bengaluru is treating supply as infinitely expandable when it is not. Its preference for grey over green infrastructure has sealed the ground against replenishment while the increasing demand liquidates ecological capital. The city does not manage its pipeline supply, groundwater, and wastewater together, allowing consumers to default to the most convenient solution: tankers. Authorities need to minimise distribution losses and penalise overextraction and mandate 100% decentralised wastewater recycling for all non-potable uses. The ideal long-term solution remains unchanged: Bengaluru needs to become a ‘sponge city’. This includes restoring the connections between lakes and wells to capture monsoon runoff, thus aligning land-use planning with the recharge capacity of each taluka, and overall sealing the ground less and increasing absorption on the surface.

Key GK Takeaways for CLAT
  • 1Bengaluru's water crisis exemplifies a failure in urban governance, where bodies like the Bangalore Water Supply and Sewerage Board (BWSSB) have not integrated pipeline, groundwater, and wastewater management. The incomplete project to supply 775 MLD to villages highlights policy implementation gaps, underscoring the critical role of municipal and state authorities in sustainable resource management and infrastructure planning for rapidly urbanizing areas.
  • 2The severe water scarcity in Bengaluru directly implicates the Right to Life under Article 21 of the Constitution, which the Supreme Court has interpreted to include the right to clean water. This crisis creates a basis for public interest litigation (PIL) against municipal bodies like the BWSSB for failing to ensure this fundamental right, challenging the adequacy of existing environmental and urban planning laws.
  • 3The water crisis creates significant socio-economic disparities, forcing residents to rely on expensive private tankers and commodifying a basic necessity. This disproportionately affects lower-income groups and residents in areas with incomplete government projects, passing on monetary and existential costs to the populace. The situation highlights the economic consequences of poor environmental planning and the liquidation of ecological capital for short-term urban expansion.
  • 4Bengaluru's crisis is a classic case of unsustainable urban development, with groundwater overextraction reaching 378% in some talukas due to a preference for grey infrastructure that prevents aquifer recharge. The proposed 'sponge city' model, which focuses on restoring lake connectivity and increasing surface absorption, represents a critical scientific shift towards nature-based solutions for urban water security and climate resilience in India.