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Home » There’s critical need to transition from supply-side augmentation to efficiency-led water management: Industry body

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There’s critical need to transition from supply-side augmentation to efficiency-led water management: Industry body

Times Desk
Last updated: April 3, 2026 6:37 pm
Times Desk
Published: April 3, 2026
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The city relies on the Cauvery river for 80% of its piped water supply, again pumping it over 100 kilometres against a steep elevation, making it one of the most energy-intensive urban water systems in the world.

The city relies on the Cauvery river for 80% of its piped water supply, again pumping it over 100 kilometres against a steep elevation, making it one of the most energy-intensive urban water systems in the world.
| Photo Credit: File Photo

With water demand expected to be double the available supply by 2030, the need to transition from supply-side augmentation to efficiency-led water management and frugal usage of the resource has become extremely critical, urged the Indian Plumbing Association, an apex body of plumbing professionals and related ecosystem players in the country.

According to the association, urban centres such as Bengaluru illustrate the gravity of this water crisis. Recent studies by the Indian Institute of Science highlighted that over 85% of the city’s lakes are eutrophic, significantly impairing their ability to support biodiversity or recharge groundwater. As natural recharge systems continue to degrade, the city’s dependence on unsustainable water sources has surged, they pointed out.

They also said that the city currently relies on the Cauvery river for 80% of its piped water supply, again pumping it over 100 kilometres against a steep elevation, making it one of the most energy-intensive urban water systems in the world. Flagging a growing imbalance between the demand and the supply for water, the industry body highlighted that there were structural vulnerabilities in urban water governance across India. 

Gurmit Singh Arora, national president, Indian Plumbing Association, said, “We all have to urgently change and correct our mindsets when it comes to water consumption and water management. There is no need to flush from a 17-litre tank after defecating or a three-litre tank after urinating. If we can adjust the water flow from flush tanks and water pipes, we can save huge volumes of water in all homes.’’

Showing examples, he said ITC Hotels has been converting grey water in its properties to purified drinking water filled in glass bottles (Sunya Aqua) through its Zero Mile Water initiative, wherein used water is treated, purified, and reused within the premises.

Mr. Arora also said that deploying smart plumbing systems, pipe networks controlled by sensors, the right kind of bathroom fittings and taps with aerators across business establishments, educational institutions, hospitals, government offices, housing projects, and individual homes could lead to responsible consumption of water and therefore would result in huge savings of water.

According to the industry body, the country’s plumbing industry is pegged at ₹5 lakh crore a year, and growing at a CAGR of 20%, a pace it maintained pre-COVID and after the pandemic.

“Water sustainability has transcended the realm of discretionary policy and now stands as a non-negotiable imperative for safeguarding India’s ecological and developmental future,’’ Mr. Arora said.

Indian Plumbing Association is scheduled to hold a plumbing exposition, PlumbexIndia 2026, between April 16 and 18 in the city in order to shine the spotlight on water sustainability and urban water challenges.

Published – April 04, 2026 12:07 am IST



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