Friday, 8 December 2017

“THANNERMUKKOM SALT WATER BARRIER” AND ENVIRONMENTAL PROBLEMS


Kuttanad Region in the state of Kerala, South India, is the area with the lowest altitude in India. This Region has an area of almost 500 square kilometers. It is one of the few places in the world where paddy farming is carried out below sea level.

Torrential rain water springs from the Western Ghats (Sahyadri Mountains and hills) descends through four major Rivers - Achankovil, Pampa, Manimala and Meenachil, into the Vembanad Lake in the Kuttanad Region. The 1252 meter long “Thanneermukkom Salt Water Barrier” was constructed across the Vembanad Lake as a part of the Kuttanad Development Scheme to prevent tidal action and intrusion of brine into the Kuttanad lowlands during summer. It is the largest mud regulator in India. This Barrier essentially divides the Vembanad Lake into two parts. The northern portion with a continuous chain of lagoons running parallel to the Arabian Sea coast, with perennial brackish water entering through Kochi estuary and two other estuaries further north, namely Crangannur and Chetwa; and the southern portion of the Barrier with fresh water fed by the four rivers. This Barrier has helped the farmers in the Kuttanad Region by freeing the area from salinity, and facilitating cultivation of three paddy crops: Virippu, Mundakan and Puncha, every year. It was believed that Kuttanad Region, the rice bowl of Kerala, would make the state self-sufficient in its staple diet, rice/paddy.

Although the Bund has initially improved the quality of life of farmers; the Barrier badly affected the ecosystem; and it prevented natural cleansing of the rivers and canals with brine, causing severe environmental problems. Unfortunately, the authorities concerned did not realize that much of the nourishing food for the plants in the rivers and the Vembanad Backwaters would be trapped by the Barrier, and fish that used to eat those plants too suffered. Moreover, the construction of Thanneermukkom Barrier and other dams in the Sahyadri Mountains and hills like Edamalayar and Idukki Dams lessened fresh water availability at the estuary regions, which made the Arabian Sea more salty and fewer fish could survive in it. The depletion of fresh water in the Arabian Sea has affected the quantity of fish.  This in turn made the fishermen who catch fish for their living suffer. 

Presently, the pollution level is very high in the Kuttanad Region. The River Pampa carries in its course all waste materials from Sabarimala in the Sahyadri Mountains, where a popular holy shrine is located. Devotees throng each season to worship Lord Ayyapan. Here sanitation facilities for pilgrims are comparatively poor. The river is highly polluted due to this.  Large amounts of waste materials including human excreta and toxic waste deposition and non-biodegradable waste like plastic is high in this region as River Pamba joins Vembanad Lake at this point. Another aggravating problem in the Kuttanad Area is lack of properly designed sanitation system. The number of households having proper sanitation facilities in this Region is   few. This leads to pollution of backwater in this area.  Stagnation of water bodies is yet another matter for serious concern due to the construction of new roads and land formations without any foresight.

Large hectares of land are under paddy cultivation in the Kuttanad Area. The agriculturists use a lot of chemical fertilizers and toxic pesticides on a large scale. Presence of toxic waste in the rivers, canals and backwaters is causing a serious threat to the environment and gravely upset the ecological balance. Severe degradation of the aquatic environment led to health hazards of people inhabiting in this area. It is significant to have access to adequate potable water, a basic human right. The number of medical cases reported including epidemic break-outs and cancers are high in this Region.

Thanneermukkom Bund has disrupted the harmony of Arabian Sea with the Vembanad Backwaters and Rivers, and has caused unforeseen problems like the lush growth of floating weeds or algae, on the surface of stagnant water bodies, like African ‘Payal,’ and ‘Katapa Payal,’ water hyacinth. These algae which are thrown out of the paddy fields in Kuttanad Region during the monsoon season, have become a menace to fishermen casting their nets in the delta regions like “Kumbalam, the God’s Own Island,”  and its adjacent and adjoining delta areas.  Reclamation of ponds, canals and paddy fields, blocking natural streams and closing large drains is also causing damage to the environment.

Vembanad, the second largest brackish-water lake in India, stretches over 24,000 hectares in area and contributes to over 50% of the total area of backwaters in Kerala, forms a significant component of coastal ecosystem due to their immense biodiversity values in aquatic ecology and socio-economic services to coastal population. Vembanad Lake provides a habitat for many of decapods crustaceans as breeding and nursery grounds. Crustacean fishery is one of the major resources of Indian estuaries that include the commercially important shrimps, prawns and crabs. The Bund prevented the migration of shoal of fish from salt water (Arabian Sea) into fresh water (Kuttanad Region,) and vice-versa for spawning, growth and development and thereby causing depletion in quantity of fish. Some fish like Pearl Spot (Karimeen) and Giant Fresh Water Prawn (Konch) lay their eggs in brackish water. Likewise, varied fish in brine like Sea Prawn and Indian Oil Sardine that used to come to the backwaters as part of the ‘Chakara,’ laid their eggs in fresh water.

It is, therefore, suggested that the government may consider and open Thanneermukkom Bund/Barrier on an experimental basis, to counteract the effect of toxic waste and other pollution levels by allowing brine to enter the canals and streams in the Kuttanad Region. The paddy research stations at Mankombu and other areas may also make earnest efforts to invent or develop salt resistant paddy varieties for cultivation in Kuttanad Region.  This will, no doubt, reduce pollution levels and help in the growth and development of fish in the common pool, the Vembanad Lake and its estuary regions at the mouths of the Arabian Sea.


Excerpts from

MEMOIRS

An autobiography
by
Joseph J. Thayamkeril
Lawyer, Kochi, Kerala, India.
josephjthayamkeril.blogspot.com
josephjthatamkeril@gmail.com

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