Water business is good business Moving Images ; directed by Sanjay Barnela, Vasant Saberwal. Videorecording

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextPublication details: [New Delhi Moving Images Under construction ©2004Edition: DVD video : EnglishDescription: 1 videodisc (ca. 27 min.) sd., col. 4 3/4 in. viewing copyOther title:
  • At head of title
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 338.476 WA
Online resources:
Contents:
India’s water bottling industry today stands on an annual worth of about 1800 crore rupees. If Lutyen’s Delhi receives 400 liters per person per day, the slums of Najafgarh receive less than 30 liters per person per day. This crisis is rooted not so much in the overall availability of water, as in the patterns of consumption and failure to regulate consumption through appropriate and equitable tariff structure. The urban mindset that seeks to source water from the rural countryside, rather than focusing on its conservation. The film travels from Delhi to Indore. Bombay to Chennai, exploring the politics and economics of urban water supplies. We come across the same solution – the construction of mega projects to bring water from distant locations, with all the attendant problems of displacing rural people from their homes and livelihoods, upwardly mobile urban populations will simply ensure a continually growing need of more water.
Summary: Documentary film on the accelerating water crisis in urban India and attempts for rain water harvesting.
Item type: Multimedia List(s) this item appears in: Global Library Multimedia Collection List | Videos on Economics
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Item type Home library Collection Shelving location Call number Materials specified Copy number Status Date due Barcode
Multimedia Multimedia OPJGU Sonepat- Campus Special collection- CD/DVD (Multimedia) Central Library 338.476 WA (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 DVD 1 Available 300116

Copyright notice on title frames: Moving Images.

Origionaly produced in 2004

India’s water bottling industry today stands on an annual worth of about 1800 crore rupees. If Lutyen’s Delhi receives 400 liters per person per day, the slums of Najafgarh receive less than 30 liters per person per day. This crisis is rooted not so much in the overall availability of water, as in the patterns of consumption and failure to regulate consumption through appropriate and equitable tariff structure. The urban mindset that seeks to source water from the rural countryside, rather than focusing on its conservation. The film travels from Delhi to Indore. Bombay to Chennai, exploring the politics and economics of urban water supplies. We come across the same solution – the construction of mega projects to bring water from distant locations, with all the attendant problems of displacing rural people from their homes and livelihoods, upwardly mobile urban populations will simply ensure a continually growing need of more water.

Documentary film on the accelerating water crisis in urban India and attempts for rain water harvesting.

DVD ; Dolby digital surround sound.

In English and Hindi with some English subtitles.

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