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Ganga,Yamuna, Brahmaputra, Damodar are few in these

Although, 5% of the total water is used for domestic use, 27% of the villages and 4 to
6% urban population in India do not have access to drinking water.
It is estimated that in New Delhi alone, 36 million tons of sewage is generated everyday
of which only 50% is treated and the rest is let out into the Yamuna river directly

The earth's water is limited, and many aquifers around the world are going dry and threatens human which
wildlife survival. Fresh water is also necessary to agriculture, which feeds most of the people on the planet.
Water is essential to all life, and we need to do everything we can to conserve and preserve it.
High quality water is more than the dream of the conservationists, more than a political slogan; high quality
water, in the right quantity at the right place at the right time, is essential to health, recreation, and economic
growth. Of all our planet's activities--geological movements, the reproduction and decay of biota, and even the
disruptive propensities of certain species (elephants and humans come to mind) -- no force is greater than the
hydrologic cycle.
Now i.e. in march 2016, around 70% of villages in Maharashtra is declared as drought prone area. The state
government with the help from centers have spent RS 21421.8 crores in the past four years. The center offered
RS 3000+ crores in 2015-16. The values goes on increasing every year. This cannot be stopped but could be
minimized.
If a technology can help to collect water and save the natural preserves, then it necessarily should be considered.

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