Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

Groundwater Recharge Improves Slightly In 2025, But One-Fourth Of India Still Faces Severe Stress


(MENAFN- AsiaNet News)

India's annual groundwater recharge slightly increased in 2025 due to a better monsoon, though it hasn't reached 2023 levels. According to the 2025 CGWB report, nearly a quarter of the country continues to face dangerously depleted groundwater.

India's groundwater situation, long a concern for planners and environmental experts, has shown a slight improvement this year. But despite better rainfall and increased recharge, nearly a quarter of the country continues to struggle with dangerously depleted groundwater levels.

This comes from the Dynamic Ground Water Resources of India, 2025 report released by the Central Ground Water Board (CGWB).

The latest report shows that India's annual groundwater recharge rose to 448.52 BCM in 2025, up from 446.9 BCM last year.

However, it still hasn't recovered to the 2023 level of 449.08 BCM, indicating that long-term pressure on aquifers continues.

Officials say this increase is mainly due to a stronger monsoon in 2025, which helped renew groundwater faster and reduce dependence on pumping for agricultural needs.

While the national average improved, several states actually saw groundwater decline this year. These include:

  • Andhra Pradesh
  • Arunachal Pradesh
  • Assam
  • Jharkhand
  • Kerala
  • Punjab
  • Jammu & Kashmir

These declines kept many districts in the semi-critical, critical, and over-exploited categories.

India assessed 6,762 groundwater units in 2025. Of these:

  • 730 units (10.8%) are over-exploited
  • Over 25% fall into semi-critical, critical, and over-exploited combined

Over-extraction is most severe in:

  • Punjab
  • Haryana
  • Delhi
  • Western Uttar Pradesh
  • Rajasthan
  • Gujarat
  • Karnataka
  • Tamil Nadu
  • Telangana
  • Andhra Pradesh

Here, groundwater extraction exceeds annual recharge, driven by indiscriminate pumping, urban expansion, and climatic pressures.

Area-wise, around:

  • 16% of India's recharge-worthy land is over-exploited
  • 12% is semi-critical
  • 3% is critical

Some states reported notable increases in groundwater recharge thanks to better rainfall and conservation efforts:

  • Bihar
  • Chhattisgarh
  • Madhya Pradesh
  • Karnataka
  • Maharashtra
  • Rajasthan
  • Tamil Nadu
  • Telangana
  • Uttar Pradesh

CGWB credits the improvement to rainfall patterns and government-led groundwater augmentation projects, including watershed management and check-dam construction.

Rainfall remains India's biggest source of groundwater recharge, nearly 60% of all recharge.

A CGWB official noted:

"Better monsoon rainfall this year meant less extraction of groundwater for irrigation and contributed significantly to the rise in recharge."

Additionally, new assessments were added from Himachal Pradesh, where evaluations expanded from valleys to block-level units.

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