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jaiganes
1st April 2005, 08:41 AM
I was reading an article by one Mr.N,Thillai Govindhan in Thinnai (www.thinnai.com) titled "Anaiyai kattinaargal adivayitril adithaargal" (Eng translation: they built the dam and destroyed our lives). It is a poignant article by a farmer which details all major irrigation dams built in Thamizh nadu have later on became a bane to the people who depended on the river for livelihood. In the age where environmental activists across the globe are fighting huge dam projects launched by ambitious governments, the original thinking of Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru in embracing Dams as a panacea to all problems facing India into question. There is a question of hydroelectric power and how dams fullfil that need. This link (http://www.enviroliteracy.org/article.php/59.html)from environmental literacy tries to answer that question. After reading the article, the argument against dams makes more sense to me. At the same time, felt that this is an issue that needs to be discussed thorughly, hence opening this topic up for discussion. Let us hear from our hubbers for more..

jaiganes
1st April 2005, 08:46 AM
Here is yet another link (http://chamisa.freeshell.org/dam.htm) that explains why there is falling watertable and disappearing acquatic life from our rivers. It is a compelling argument against dams.

Badri
1st April 2005, 08:57 AM
Hi JG: Thanks for bringing up an interesting discussion topic. Before we proceed, you had provided a few links. Perhaps it would be a good idea for you to give a brief summary of what those links contain? Just a couple of paragraphs maybe - one on the pros and other on the cons to jumpstart the discussion?

I tried one of those links and ended up with many more, and before getting lost in cyberspace, I retraced my steps. No doubt, many other hubbers might share the same thought, so it would really help if you gave a quick summary. If it is not too much trouble, that is.

Badri
1st April 2005, 09:15 AM
Before anyone else can use the cliche, let me! There are two sides to any coin.

There, that's done. Now let us see which side of this coin outweighs the other.

Some of the Pros

a) Flood Control - Floods affected some 65 million people in the world between 72-96. Dams have helped control much of this

b) Irrigation - Dams help influence 12-16% of food production

c) Power Generation :19% of the worlds total electricy supply, in 150 countries. 24 countries depend on dams for 90% of their power supply.

d) Improved navigation: Stabilized annual flows

e) Improved domestic water availability - In 1990, over a billion people had access to less than the minimum required of 50 litres per person per day.

f) Recreation: Fishing, boating, tourist spots etc

g) Ecological: Increased riparian vegetation if dam discharges are steady (riparian refers to riverside)

Most of these obviously have human interests in mind. For the longest time, we have been only aware of this one aspect of all developmental activity, with the result that the negative consequences of human selfishness are now coming back to haunt us in the form of a depleted ozone layer, global warming, loss of rainforests etc.

Now, let us look at some of the cons:

a) Ecological disruption - Fragmentation of 60% of the worlds rivers;

b) Disruption of movement of species (e.g., destruction of up to 75% of riparian bird species on the Colorado)

c) Destruction of riparian vegetation if discharges are irregular, e.g., peak-power of flood control types of operations; loss of beaches and marshes

d) Seepage and evaporation - 15% for Nile system causing major Groundwater table effects

e) Sedimentation behind dams - sediment is deposited behind the dams, and so erosion is increased downstream by sediment-starved waters

g) Flucuation vs. steady releases - Flucuations strand fish, reduce habitat for larval native fishes; deny access to tributaries;

h) Clogging of rivers by side-canyon floods - Peak floods required to clear channel may be eliminated

i) Dams induce seismic activity in previously aseismic zones

Not to mention the disasters that loom large should a dam break, the relocation of villages and towns to make way for dams, destruction of historic and ecological sites, water disputes (our famous TN - Karnataka style)....

Well, looks like the argument against dams wins!!!

While dams do seem to offer immediate benefits, the cost in the long run is high! There have been considerable benefits from dams, but they have demanded and continue to exact a very high price for those benefits.

jaiganes
1st April 2005, 09:38 AM
Badri thanks for an interesting post.
The first link i had provided was from the thamizh site, thinnai .com, where our pavalamani madam's poems also have been published. In the article, Mr. N.Thillai Govindhan, details how all major dams in Thamizh nadu have ended up as huge failures.
1.How the dams have indirectly been the reason for sand smuggling mafia to multiply along the river beds.
2. How the sand and debris flow which enriched the farmlands downstrean are no longer available
3. How dams became tools of political propaganda and were built where there was no need and to a specification that caused other needless issues.
4. Examples of such useless dams which went on to destroy th eriver ecosystem and effectively contributed to lowering of groundwater level throughout.

for a full translation, it would require a day and I need to get the permission from Thinnai .com.
The questions raised are heartfelt and need urgent attention from union and state governments concerned.

Badri
1st April 2005, 09:40 AM
Your poll is very black and white, JG...what about a third grey option pa??

jaiganes
1st April 2005, 09:54 AM
poll was an afterthought badri!
I simply wanted this topic to be discussed and that is more important in my opinion. what do u say? if u want a third option, i dont know how to add it? any tips?

Badri
1st April 2005, 09:56 AM
Valid topic, although it doesnt seem to support much by way of a debate. The facts against the dam appear damning!

jaiganes
1st April 2005, 10:15 AM
badri wrote:

The facts against the dam appear damning!
Not that easy!
I saw in Ahmedabad how the canals build from dam projects over Narmada and Tapti have irrigated previously arid regions of Gujarat. People of the region are of course happy. The question arises more so in the case of building a huge dam like Sardar sarovar project. small dams and check dams have been proven to be useful in the long run too. Classic examples are the bunds and check dams that Anna Hazare helped build in Maharashtra. They have helped in a huge way in water conservation. A big dam like the stanley reservoir over Kaveri in Mettur or K.R.sagar over Kaveri in Karnataka are hardly useful. The whole idea of building huge dams was a backward looking vision of Nehru, who thought our farmers were not scientific enough while the soviet government and farmers were some kind of whizkids of science. As a result he ordered mass dam mania in India, which took water management from being a task of local farmers to a centralised, government controlled process. Now 50 years after, we are realising how ingenious were our farmers in creating check dams and small bunds, which helped these village face vagaries of rain for centuries. Now the government feels helpless as the farmers of modern India have grown used to free water, free power and free development and have started opposing any move to reform water and power sectors. Added to this each and every village is fighting its neighbour over water and not to mention the fight between states that seems to be never ending. So smaller dams should be constructed in every village (reconstruction is the word as our ancestors already have built it and we have simply ignored to use them) and the huge dams should be dismantled.

Badri
1st April 2005, 10:30 AM
There are dams, and then there are dams, JG.

Check dams and anaicuts are common enough phenomenon that have been found dating back to several centuries. They represent sustainable living. It is the Mega Dams that are of concern.

Let us face the facts - too much tinkering of the environment has now been found to have severe ecological consequences. Living with nature has now been recognized as the best alternative. Sustainable agriculture and living are gaining greater ground, and in this, we revert back to the practices of our ancient forefathers of all countries in that they were aligned with Nature and the environment, and their living did not cause any large scale manipulation of Nature.

Mega dams, however, are a classic example of such large scale manipulations.

And I wouldn't apportion all the blame to Nehru! Dam building was a rage at one point of time. It represented the height of development in terms of infrastructre and technology, much as nuclear armament came to be known in later years. While we have realized the danger and futility of the latter much sooner, we are yet to realize the danger posed by the former. Countries like the US too have not been spared this dam mania, as you put it, and are today seriously revaluating the need for more dams and even existing dams.

Can't hardly blame Nehru for it all, although I do remember studying about the Bhakra Nangal Dam and how it was the brainchild of Nehru and shows his vision etc!!!

jaiganes
1st April 2005, 12:34 PM
badri wrote:

Can't hardly blame Nehru for it all, although I do remember studying about the Bhakra Nangal Dam and how it was the brainchild of Nehru and shows his vision etc!!!
I am not trying to squarely blame Nehru for everything. I am just pointing out the fact that Nehru was too westfacing that he undermined the traditional knowledge of Indian farmers. Gandhiji, on the other hand was always blamed as being too traditional and old fashined. Gandhiji's ideals (even economic) will stand the test of time. Nehru was an ardent supporter of democratic ideals but sadly for development he only looked to the west forgetting the traditional knowledge. Remember, befor Britishers came, we were a flourishing economy and the credit must go to the micro level fiscal management that was prevalent. Gandhiji argued that we should go back to that minus the caste and other social evils. This would have meant that the large rural population would have got their problems addressed immediately and with the zeal that we had in early days of post independence any amount of social change and land reforms would have been achieved.
Nehru concurred with the soviet socialist argument that rapid industrialization and modern agricultural practices of that time(which was consuming huge water and rejected later) were the only way to go ahead. His view was that as the country remained a socialist republic, the social ills would die a natural death and rural people who couldn't get employed in farmlands could easily find jobs in modern industries that can now be located anywhere because of the water availabilty due to huge dams. The only positive spinoff from this vision was the need government had for engineers en masse' which could only be satisfied by IITs and RECs and other private institutions.
Still I would have opted for Gandhian economics considering the state of country at that time. Even now, the rural India must choose to go the Gandhian way, which is nothing but the age old knowledge of rural India. It is a pity that other countries around the world have started to look upon Gandhian management as a serious tool of political, social and economic empowerment, while in our country we have neglected them totally, thus doing a great disservice to a noble soul. There is no use in simply chanting "vaishno Janate" on October 2nd.

Badri
1st April 2005, 12:50 PM
:clap: JG.

Brilliant analysis, as usual. Yes, rather unfortunate, although I still wouldn't blame Nehru - he did what he thought was best, and this damning initiatve was just one more in that long line!!

"India lives in her villages" - for this statement alone, Gandhi should be declared wise, for a truer statement had never been uttered. Not just India, but her wisdom and progress as well. But standing where we are at the moment, guess we have the benefit of hindsight!

The soviet experiment which Nehru chose to emulate has sadly failed! Good thing at least Nehru didnt live to see it, but it has left us with the legacy of several faulty intiatives, whose price we shall continue to pay. But the Gandhian concept of sustainability including trust in the native intelligence of our rural practices would have no doubt helped us, had it been but augmented with modern practices. The total overhauling of those, which is what the rapid industrialization did, only left confusion in its wake.

But going forward, what can be done? Is it possible to demolish existing dams? New ventures may need serious reconsideration, as being insisted by NBA. But what alternatives can we have to both satisfy the energy needs as well as water harvesting requirements?

jaiganes
1st April 2005, 01:58 PM
Thanks badri!!

badri wrote:

Is it possible to demolish existing dams
America is already doing it. I dont see a reason why we cannot do it.

Infact, 3-4 months back saw a horrifying report in Sun News on a dam in Madurai district(I am not sure) which was full, but the farmers of all downstream villages went in a procession to the collector to request not to open the dam as it was willed with waste and sewage water. What a collosal waste of human effort and government expenditure!! A dam built by the government is acting as a drainage lake!!! The waste is mostly industrial effluence and hence toxic to the land downstream.

Though we can argue saying that there was a violation and graft from some chemical company and our pollution control board sanctioned that in breach of regulations, it only highlights the fact that industries are there in our country where they have no business of being in. SO thanks to Nehruvian economics what we have in our country is rapid industrialization (which is also subsidised if it is in a so called backward region) in tandem with "license permit inspector raj". A heady combination which in my opinion heralded corruption highway in our country.

A Gandhian approach would not have created a useless industry emitting toxic effluents in the vicinity of a river used for agriculture and wouldn't have built a stupid dam too. This is one example is at a microlevel and you just have to multiply this with the number of districts we have in our nation to get to the final figure in US$ that this experiment has cost our nation. The situation today is to solve this core issue we have to deal with a host of other issues. What are they? Let us continue with the example cited above..
1. First punish the industry and the governement officials responsible to clearing the license for that industry.
2. Close the industry or relocate it to some other place.
3. If you do the second point, then communists and trade unionists of all shades will carry the hammer and sickle and create ruckus. So this rabid trade unionisation without reason is another issue that our country has to deal with. We have to talk to them and remind them that the industry in question might have given jobs to hundreds of workers, but allowed to function it will end up killing lives of thousands. If they agree then we are in good luck. Most likely the principal opposition is likely to get involved and make sreaming headlines for their family owned TV (If it's DMK, then SUN TV will show or if it is vice versa, JayaTV is likely to shout about it).
4. Provided we are lucky there then the question of destroying the stupid dam comes. Government employees who are incharge of the dam are not likely to take it lyng down either, so they will go on a hartaal. They can be pacified with a simple hike in DA or transfer to a 'nice and profitable' place.
5. Provided you do all this, you can make this situation right. But given the level of government apathy and sensationalist times we are living in, Jayalakshmi's travails will have more media and government attention.

This is enough to highlight the muck that surrounds each and every sphere of our life, that needs to be cleaned quickly so that we can think of progress in rural india that can give a human face to reforms. Till then, NDA or UPA, nobody can provide uniform benefits to the people of India. There will be always who are lucky to live in the rainy region and those who live in regions of eternal rain shadow.

Badri
1st April 2005, 02:02 PM
To cut a long story short, it is a hopeless situation :lol:

Sad pa..not the right note to leave for home on a Friday evening!!!

Sudhaama
4th April 2005, 01:15 AM
Dear Jaiganes,

Thanks a lot... for drawing our worthy attention towards a time-relevant Hot-Topic ... in a wonderful manner of presentation backed by a beautiful weaving of apt words.

In my Opinion Dams are Dam necessary for any Country.... Many fallow Lands have become highly rich as also the Water-tables in the region have risen up well remarakably. For example the whole of Bellary District which was considered a Dead-weight to the Nation then.. being almost a Dry district forcing the then Madras presidency Govt. to rush Rice from Tanjore District of those days. Whereas after construction of Tungabhadra dam near Hospet... the whole District has become fertile and rich an Asset to Karnataka.

But we have to remember that as you rightly said... there are minimum two-sides for anything and every subject on life.

Even for the Basic factors of Life... such as... Marriage or getting children or Advanced studies / Employment in Overseas... etc.... And indeed those minimum two problems used to indicate the opposite poles... so to say each positive-side portends the other side unseen or unsighted of too. When anything is handled without Far- sight ... cumulative problems do occur sometimes making more complex.
Now I put forth the Third-dimension of theTopic on your discussions...

(1) If and When an accident occurs in a Road, or Railway or even in Airflight... we do not think too far to eliminate that Rich facility itself...
Similarly these are the After-effects or Side-effects of a Theoretical Medicine... administered so far.. Now it has seriously lead towards some imminent Danger on Basic Life-system itself. But the Fault DOES NOT Squarely rest on the Concept of an intermedite Insertion of a Dam- Structure in between the course of River. .. But where?

(2) Rivers are Natural Wealth of a Nation... They should be allowed to Exist, Thrive and enrich the People, whereas our politicians are KILLING them by slow-poisoning.. How ?

(a) No River should be blocked for a major part of the year ... taking the Selfish interests of the Upstream Regions only ignoring the parallel rights of the Riparian regions. So to say... the River-flow should be allowed tio be perennial all through the year, allowing to reach the Ocean in a seady flow... to a minimum depth. Otherwise not only the Agriculture but also the Forest-wealth of Botanical-life Fauna as well as the Animal life... will perish... leading to the deterioration as Desert.... Rajasthan ... is the best example for this phenomena. It was one of the most fertile states once upon a time...today is struggling even for Drinking water.

(b) It is totally against the Rudimentary principle of Irrigation- Engineering ... to locate Dams in the ROOT-TRIBUTARIES ... although it is the simplest easiest and the most economical by initial cost. Consequently the total-extent of water- flow from the Tributaries can be allowed to reach the Main-River flow.... Lest the Main River will gradually DIE off..

(c) Using the River only as a Drainage to clear off the Surplus Rain-water... on one season... and totally dry for the other seasons of the year... denying the needs of the Forest leads to Ecological imbalance.

(3) Improper Water-Management culminates in Seismic-imbalance.
... because the upstream side of the Dam constantly contains heavy storage and collness while the other side of the Dam... Down-stream side... suffers due to no loss of super-incumbent weight alongside the excessive heat due to lack of water.

The Best example or illustration for all the above odds... is the series of Dams constructed on all the Tributaries of Kaveri main River...including its major contributors ... Kabini, Vega- Vauhini and others.

Then the Solution...

(1) Immediate URGENCY .. Keeping the interests of Riparian regions also in mind... .Allow a minimum depth flow all through the year irrespective of Rains... ensuring the ultimate reach of River to the ocean constantly.

(2) Inter-connect all the Rivers by Cross-canals... by which Internal-Navigation can share with the present unweildy loads on Roads and Railways.... apart from solving all these hurdles.. This shold be planned in a phased manner.. starting from Godavari to Tambraparni

Nothing can be a Problem to accomplish this Rich Goal towards the common interests of all concerned...

Now the Rivers are being KILLED. Only BIG PROBLEM HURDLES... are the Politicians...

...Who wants the Problems to be PERENNIAL.. and Not the Rivers.

jaiganes
4th April 2005, 09:41 AM
Sudhaama ji!
wonderful points you have put forth for dams (with checks and balances).
I would beg to differ with you in comparing a dam (huge one) with a road or railway. The ecological impact of a dam is too huge and its socio economic impacts are also tremendous. Your claim that Bellary region has benefitted because of the TB canal projects emanating from the TB dam is surely correct, but Gandhian way of doing things would be to live in the manner the native intelligence of people of Bellary told them to do so. It is not as if people of Bellary are not used to dryness. The arid regions of Bellary were not completely barren for ages, people living there used to grow crops that take up crops which consumed less water and now thanks to the TB canal project they too are cultivating rice and sugarcane, more water consuming and less resistant to the pests and drought like situations in the area. This means the native variety of crops of Bellary are dying a slow extinction. What it also means is that the areas which were fertile due to constant flow of Tunga Bhadra have now become barren (like our cauvery basin in Thanjavur). To use the analogy of Mr.Thillai Govindhan in the Thinnai article, it is like robbing peter to pay Paul. The socio economic impact remains sadly the same and if you take a pan Indian view there are always ppl denied of water due to dams which were meant to provide someone with the same.

Sudhaama
5th April 2005, 02:10 AM
"jaiganes"

//I would beg to differ with you in comparing a dam (huge one) with a road or railway//

I clarify further...Roads and Railways are the facilities towards Advancement... OK? .

But sometimes they cause some Problems too... UNSEEN before ... in their absence... OK?

Under such circumstances can anybody blame the addition of such facilities and advise to remove the Road or Railway...

simply because of accidents due to traffic or even due to a wrong alignment?

So to say ... my point is... the Problem is not in the Concept of Dam ...

....but in the.... WATER MANAGEMENT... Repeat... WATER-MANAGEMENT

Farmers of both Karnataka and Tamilnadu are our People. All Indians alike... performing good service to the country... By their enthusiastic production ... not only they are benefited in the respective states but also the other Buyer-states consumers too due to price-reduction and cost control... benefiting the National Economy as well...

The Blunder is only on the respective states Politicians who are approaching the matter in a Parochial outlook of Divisive- fanaticism for political gains..

A simple fact... the Congress MlLAs and MPs of Tamilnadu say one point... whereas the MLAs and MPs of Karnataka on the same point oppose it... even though ONE NATIONAL PARTY ?

Same case with BJP... Where is the National Spirit ? Where is India?

Solution NOT AT ALL IMPOSSIBLE... Nor DIFFICULT... But VERY VERY EASY.

All Politicians KEEP OFF. Leave the Problem to the Professionals... so to say the ENGINEERS....They can Solve EASILY... How?...

Imagine the regions of Tamilnadu and Karnataka as ONE Single State... How it would have been managed ?

They will meticulously plan the overall Demands Vs Availability of Resources... and accordingly...Regulate the Flow... in a calculated manner

... but in any case ensuring the minimum Survival demands of the Forest-plants as well as the Forest-Life of the whole region including the riparian.

What is happening Now?... Due to politicians pressure on the Engineers of Upstream State... all the Rain water is BLOCKED within the upstream State only... FEARING for a Drought-situation in the course of FUTURE FIVE YEARS!

But the surging Flood-flow just within a few months during the Rainy- season of the same year... makes them RUSH to open out the Dam-Gates... wide enough. to clear off the Surplus flow... Quickly.., as a Drain-water UNWANTED for the whole Region of the River-flow... since Non-season for both the regions.

Ultimately it gets DRAINED to the Sea... as Unused... While Starving for the other seasons of the same year.

While the Current year demands of the Riparian state is TOTALLY DENIED... making the later Starve with Heavy Debts... depending on Local Rains only.

//.... Gandhian way of doing things would be to live in the manner the native intelligence of people..//

Gandhian way ... mostly is mistaken by people... even by the Congressmen. Gandhi wanted to enrich the Villagers by one and all the means at their easy reach.

(1) Additional income by Self-employment ... Charka and Handicrafts.

(2) He was against Heavy Industries or Mass-industrialisation just to mint money at the cost of labour .... rather causing loss of employment to the people to the loweer-skilled and unskilled people. But after detailed analytical discussions with the Experts along with mr. Birla.. he reraced his formulae and agreed in Principle... that anything which will not cause a Economic- Disparity or create loss of employment or make anybody an undue Victim... was acceptable to him. During such discussions... Mr. Nehru and mr. Patel were with the whole Experts -meet. Patel fully agreed and apreciated... But Neheru got angry and without any remarks or justification for his disagreement... he abruptly left..

.Ultimately Nehru got passed all his One-sided Resolutions of Communistic-concept in the Parliament ...with the blind support of the Yes-masters of Nehru ... the Brutal Majority then... ignoring Patel's several sensible oppositions

Consequences of which ... the present innocent Farmers ...are Weaping while the Indians on the whole are Reaping.

Main draw-back... proper UTILITY-MANAGEMENT.. primarily apart from the Flaws in the Initial Projects Planning.

//....robbing peter to pay Paul. The socio economic impact remains sadly the same //

Yes... Because of one-sided planning and unnecessary interference of Politicians overlooking the experts and Engineers FARSIGHTED advices.

//... if you take a pan Indian view there are always ppl denied of water due to dams which were meant to provide someone with the same.//

You are dragging me towards the Fundamentals of Irrigation Subject in my Engineering studies... about 55 years back...

What are Dams?.. Why are they NECESSARY?

(1) In the absence of Dams major part of the Flow goes on waste to Sea.. So it is blocked and Stored .... preventing WASTAGE.

(2) To make it available for the SEASON when it is required for Agricultural-needs.

(3) To ensure uninterrupted supply to Farmers... for consecutive years keeping in mind the flucutuations and vagaries of rains.

(4) To chanelise the flow to different areas for Cultivation, Fishing, Drinking (Human-Consumption), Industrial-needs

(5) To check or Arrest the sudden impact or onslaughts of Flood-rush due to heavy rains in any one region.... distributed through various directions by canals.... which wil seriously inundate the villages at the Banks.

(6)To prevent River-erosion due to the excessive water-force of Erratic uncontrolled River-flow all through the year varying due to imbalanced INTAKE and OUTFOW.

(7) To avail the maximum advantage of the Natural wealth towards the Overall Benefit as Maximum extent of region and as widest utilities as Possible ..including Internal Navigation.(on Stagnant-water in Canals)

(8) It enables control over the River-bed-Erosion (due to sudden onrush of Flood-waters) ..by means of regulated flows through different canals

(9) Due to wider area feed through Distribution-canals ... Water-Table in the whole of such ayacut regions rises up more

So I reiterate... the Dams are Dam NECESSARY AND VITAL for India ...

But... the Lacunae and even BLUNDER is ...because of the...

... Irrational .. Unrealistic... Insensible WATER-MANAGEMENT...

In brief, Politics entered Engineering .. and Engineering lost in Politics!!

jaiganes
5th April 2005, 12:41 PM
Wonderfully constructed views Sudhaamaji!
Though we have been told the good things about dams in our engineering text books, ecological studies have shown the other side of dams that these books havent.
There are two aspects of this problem.
1. The ground reality of usefulness of dams
2. Even if useful, the politics that walks in to play spoilsport.

I see this harmful effect of dams, that offsets the very reason for its existence - WATER. Wherever dams have been constructed, entire ecosystems have vanished on either sides of the dam. I would implore you to see the wonderful movie "Dweepa" by Girish Kasaravalli. It details the official apathy and harmful effects that dams have on population. Dams are built to store water and when they are constructed, thousands of square miles of forests on wither side of the river are destroyed. The down stream is sucked dry of water and the ground water level dips below te critical level (a minimal constant supply of water from the dam is always to be ensured, but doesn't happen all the time). This means that surrounding the dam thousands of square miles of land is cleared of forests and therefore is now available for human occupation and industrial use. This would immediately mean that there will be a huge displacement of humans,cattle and other artificial setups that would require millions of gallons of water per year. So ultimately the water saved up is spent of this new entrant into the area. Increased stress on natural resources in the area becomes a reality thanks to the dam. Ultimately, in the long run, the dam loses its value and usefulness. The deforestation due to the construction of dam will eventually mean lesser rainfall and vegetation that can trap the debris from the river and the land fails to hold the nutrients. This will eventually affect the farmers who are the supposed beneficiaries of these mega dams.

Sudhaama
5th April 2005, 09:08 PM
Scientist... Thomas Alwa Edison... invented the Electric Bulb.. we know.

His first invented version of Bulb... was too Big in size... with Carbon Rod as the Filamant.... which developed smoke within.. and the whole Bulb became Black and Dark... without any Emanation of Light or Brightness....

He improved on it...as the second version...which solved the first Problem but caused a second problem of short-life of Filamant Carbon-rod which got burnt and fused within a short while.

His third version was Copper-Filamant... which Solved the First and second Problems... but it was too dim... so a Third problem...

Ultimately he succeeded... after series of Inventions by Improvements over the previous Inventions... solving Problems after Problems

That is the Scientific approach on Life...which God / Nature has thrust on Mankind.

Dam is a Human-Invention... Man has to improve on it based on Reality...

... and Not get stuck-up Stagnant ... crying over the ....SPILT-MILK...

My Dear Jaiganes... please add WHEELS to your Horse... Let it move Forward...

It is just ROCKING at the same location from where you started!!!

Sudhaama
8th April 2005, 06:20 AM
Mr. Jaiganes,

Your Reply to mine... and further.... Your Thoughts?

jaiganes
8th April 2005, 08:51 AM
Dear sudhaama!
I am set in my position and you in yours. Will have to wait for sometime when a new line of thought emerges. Till that time, as you said this topic is rocking in the same places. I guess... :D