From plumbers: Is Bengaluru’s RWH law working?

The demand for installing RWH system has shot up from the last two years as people are now aware of the rainwater harvesting law and the grim water situation.

With the city’s growing water woes, rainwater harvesting has come into focus time and again. It was also made compulsory in Bangalore by law.

The BWSSB (Amendment) Act passed in August 2009, states that every owner or occupier of a building having a sital area of 2,400 sqft and above, or every owner who proposes to construct a building on a sital area of 1,200 sqft and above, should install rainwater harvesting structures.

Following the law and various awareness exercises conducted in the city, it appears that RWH installation pace has picked up much more compared to earlier years. The people who are where the rubber really hits the road are the plumbers.

This is a short four-minute citizen-shot video of one conversation with an experienced Bengaluru plumber, Pradeep Kumar. Listen to his on-the-ground perspective on RWH, the law and Bangalore.

Kumar is from Orissa who has been working in Bangalore for seven years now. He says that the rainwater harvesting projects have increased greatly from the last two years, which proves that the law has kicked in and people are aware of it. “I get around 100 small RWH projects and two to three big RWH projects every month. I also get maintenance calls – typically to clean the filter”, he says.

Pradeep makes one more interesting point. He feels the unreliability of BWSSB or Cauvery water even in areas with water connections is driving up the interest in RWH installations. Kumar feels everyone should practice RWH to cut down on the dependency on piped water.

When asked about where people usually store rainwater, he says, ”They either store it in a tank and use it directly or recharge it using a recharge well of about 20 feet deep”.

Installing a Rainwater harvesting system ranges anywhere between Rs 10,000 to Rs 50,000 depending on the size of the pipe and area he says.

Kumar’s team comprises 30 people and he adds, “There are easily thousand other plumbers who do this like us”, in Bengaluru.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Similar Story

Walk through Panaji brings up memories and vision for city

How do citizens envision a net-zero Panaji, given today’s realities? What does the future hold? A guided walk serves food for thought.

I’ve lived in Bangalore since 2005; whenever visiting friends want me to take them to Bangalore Palace, I chuckle and confess I haven’t been there myself. We’ve all experienced living in a city whose joys and woes we haven’t fully explored. Guided walks can help us connect more deeply with our cities when familiarity might have bred contempt or, simply, blindness. It was to help residents deepen their understanding of Panaji, Goa’s administrative capital, and to visualise possible futures for Panaji, that Transitions Research, in collaboration with the Travelling Dome, organised guided walks on Friday, 15th March and Sunday, 17th…

Similar Story

Vote for clean air, water security and nature conservation: Environment and civil society groups

The youth of the country will bear the brunt of climate change impact in the absence of government action, say voluntary groups.

The country is going to the polls in one of the most keenly watched elections of all time, and a collective of 70 environment and civil society organisations have appealed to voters to assess the threat to the environment and ecology when they cast their votes in the Lok Sabha 2024 elections. Here is what the organisations have said in a joint statement: As Indians prepare to vote in the Lok Sabha elections this year, it is very important to think of the future of our democracy, especially the youth and their right to clean air and water security in…