environmentneutral
Rain Races: India’s Water Woes and Farmer Fears
India, MumbaiFriday, June 26, 2026
India’s monsoon, usually kicking off in June, arrived two weeks late this year—thirsty cities and anxious farmers bear the brunt.
Urban Water Woes
- Mumbai has halted water supply to swimming pools and construction sites that use it for concrete.
- Residents line up for hours at public taps to collect just a few liters.
- A 33‑year‑old housekeeper shared: “I wait two hours for ten liters, then rush home to care for my children.”
Farmers in Peril
- Northern states: Crop planting delayed until rain arrives; low rainfall threatens deeper debt.
- A millet farmer in Uttar Pradesh worries the lack of rain is worse than before.
- Madhya Pradesh: A soybean farmer “waits anxiously for the clouds to open” and can do nothing but hope.
- Groundwater: Levels are dropping as farmers pump more water for farming and construction.
India’s many small‑holder farms (most <2 acres) are the largest groundwater users worldwide.
Bottom Line
Climate change is not a distant threat—it’s reshaping daily life now. Without stronger planning and governance, future bad rains could spell serious water shortages across the country.
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