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Arkavathi River
Arkavathi River
from Wikipedia

Arkavathi River
Tippagondanahalli Reservoir
Map
Location
CountryIndia
StateKarnataka
DistrictChikkaballapur, Bengaluru Rural, Bengaluru Urban, Ramanagara
Physical characteristics
SourceNandi Hills
 • locationChikkaballapur, Karnataka, India
 • coordinates13°22′07″N 77°40′53″E / 13.368689°N 77.681335°E / 13.368689; 77.681335
 • elevation1,478 m (4,849 ft) approx.
MouthKaveri River
 • location
Sangama River Point, Ramanagara, India
 • coordinates
12°17′17″N 77°25′56″E / 12.287986°N 77.432141°E / 12.287986; 77.432141
 • elevation
440 m (1,440 ft) approx.
Length190 km (120 mi)approx.
Basin features
Tributaries 
 • left
 • rightKumudvathi

The Arkavati is an important mountain river in Karnataka, India, originating at Nandi Hills of Chikkaballapura district.[1] It is a tributary of the Kaveri, which it joins at 34 km south of Kanakapura, Ramanagara District called Sangama in Kannada, after flowing through Ramanagara and Kanakapura. The river drains into the Chikkarayappanahalli Lake near Kanivenarayanapura. Kumudavathi and Vrishabhavathi rivers are tributaries to this river. It forms Chunchi falls near Haroshivanahalli. It joins Cauvery river as a tributary near Mekedatu.

Course

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The river originates in the Nandi Hills in the Chikkaballapura district and flows through Ramanagara and Kanakapura before it eventually drains into the Chikkarayappanahalli Lake near Kanivenarayanapura. The Arkavati joins the Kaveri river around 34 km south of Kanakapura in the Ramanagara District. The river has three tributaries; Kumudavathi River, Suvarnamukhi River, and Vrishabhavathi River.

Source of Arkavathy River at Nandi Hills

History

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The river has historically been used as a source of drinking water in Banglore and the surrounding regions.

Kingdom of Mysore Period

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In 1891, when Bangalore had a population of just 180,000 people, the then dewan of Mysore, K. Seshadri Iyer realized the lack of a dedicated water source for the city and took up the construction of the Chamarajendra Waterworks at Hesaraghatta across the river. The reservoir was designed to supply water for up to 250,000 people. By 1918, the population of the city had already reached 250,000 and the reservoir was running dry. The Sir M Visvesvaraya committee recommended the construction of Tippagondanahalli reservoir which was commissioned in 1933. The first stage was designed to provide a daily supply of 27 million liters per day (MLD) of water for a population of 300,000. However, even this was not enough and, so, modifications were made to cater to the population of one million in 1956. Eventually, the Chamaraja Sagar reservoir was insufficient and the government had to turn to the Kaveri to fulfill the water needs of Bangalore.[2]

Decline in 1980s

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It has been widely agreed upon that the destruction of the Arkavathi came about in the 1980s. This was a time when Bengaluru was urbanizing rapidly, which not only increased the demand for drinking water but also created scarcity for manual labor in the peripheral areas. As a result, the cost of labor went up. Added to this, the demand for firewood went up and as part of social forestry, the forest department distributed free eucalyptus seedlings to farmers. Eucalyptus is a water-intensive tree that uses up a large quantity of groundwater. This, in turn, reduced the groundwater levels in the catchment areas of the river and severely affected the water flow.[2]

Efforts at Rejuvenation

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In 2005, the Arkavathy-Kumudvati River Rejuvenation Committee was formed to rejuvenate the river. But there were no further steps taken except forming the committee.[3] The Bangalore Water Supply and Sewerage Board (BWSSB) attempted to purify the river through aerator systems to increase dissolved oxygen and a series of plants that remove pollutants and also to reduce the inflow of sewage into T.G. Halli.[4] [5]

See also

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References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
The Arkavathi River is a non-perennial river in , , originating from the Nandi Hills in district and serving as a major tributary of the Cauvery River. It spans approximately 190 kilometers, draining a basin area of 4,150 square kilometers predominantly within , with minor extension into . Key tributaries include the Kumudavathi, Suvarnamukhi, and Vrishabhavathi rivers, while significant infrastructure such as the Tippagondanahalli and dams historically supported water supply to Bengaluru. Despite its ecological and hydrological importance, the river has experienced severe degradation, including flow reduction and from urban effluents and agricultural runoff, exacerbated by and groundwater overexploitation, rendering stretches dry for extended periods.

Geography

Origin and Course

The Arkavathi River originates in the Nandi Hills of Chikkaballapur district, Karnataka, at an elevation of 1,478 meters above sea level. This source lies within the Deccan Plateau's hilly terrain, where the river begins as a perennial stream fed by rainfall and springs. From its origin, the Arkavathi flows generally southwest, initially traversing rural landscapes in Chikkaballapur before entering Bangalore Rural district. It continues through Ramanagara district, passing near towns such as Doddamagadihalli and Byramangala, where it is impounded by the Byramangala Reservoir. The river then proceeds to Kanakapura, maintaining a course characterized by seasonal flow variations influenced by the Western Ghats' monsoon patterns. The Arkavathi joins the Cauvery River at Sangama, near in Ramanagara district, approximately 34 kilometers south of . Over its total length of about 190 kilometers, the river experiences an elevation drop of roughly 1,108 meters, contributing to its gradient and historical potential. Key infrastructure along the course includes the Tippagondanahalli Reservoir, constructed to capture flows for Bengaluru's .

River Basin and Tributaries

The Arkavathi River basin encompasses approximately 4,150 square kilometers, with 96% located in and 4% extending into . It primarily drains four districts in : Bengaluru Urban (25%), (50%), Bengaluru Rural (21%), and (0.2%). The basin's features an drop of 1,108 meters from the river's source at Nandi Hills (1,478 meters) to its confluence with the Cauvery River (370 meters), supporting a network of sub-watersheds that include agricultural lands, urban areas, and forested uplands. The basin is fed by three major tributaries: the Kumudvathi, Suvarnamukhi, and Vrishabhavathi rivers. The Kumudvathi River, originating from Shivagange Hills in Nelamangala taluk and spanning about 45 kilometers, joins the Arkavathi near the Thippagondanahalli Reservoir, historically contributing to Bengaluru's water supply before depletion from overuse. The Suvarnamukhi River arises in the Bannerghatta Hills and merges with the Arkavathi downstream, providing additional drainage from southeastern parts of the Bengaluru Urban district, though its flow has been impacted by urbanization. The Vrishabhavathi River, the longest at 69 kilometers and originating near Nandi Teertha Temple, traverses southern Bengaluru, channeling urban runoff and industrial effluents before converging with the Arkavathi approximately 20 kilometers downstream of Ramanagara; it has become a primary vector for pollution entering the main basin due to untreated sewage and waste from over 1,000 industries. These tributaries collectively divide the basin into eight sub-watersheds, influencing local through varied catchment characteristics, with the Vrishabhavathi sub-basin alone covering 360.62 square kilometers across Bengaluru Urban and districts. The integration of flows sustains and storage, such as at Thippagondanahalli, but increasing anthropogenic pressures have altered natural drainage patterns.

Hydrology and Water Resources

Historical Flow Patterns

The Arkavathi River historically displayed pronounced seasonal flow variations typical of peninsular Indian rivers, with peak discharges occurring during the southwest monsoon from June to September, followed by sustained baseflows in the post-monsoon and dry seasons that maintained perennial flow. Inflow records to the Thippagondanahalli Reservoir, operational since 1933, document average inflows of 385 million liters per day (MLD), equivalent to approximately 140 million cubic meters annually, for the period prior to 1975, reflecting robust hydrological conditions supporting Bengaluru's water supply. Monthly inflow analyses from the same reservoir reveal extended periods lasting several months after the cessation, contributing significantly to total annual runoff and preventing upstream of major impoundments. These patterns, derived from gauging stations established in the early , indicate a index exceeding 50% in pre-1970s decades, underscoring contributions from the basin's fractured rock aquifers recharged by rains. Pre-20th century quantitative data remain sparse, but colonial assessments for the Hesaraghatta Reservoir, constructed in 1894, presupposed reliable Arkavathi yields sufficient for urban supply, with the operational until drought-induced shortfalls in the prompted further . Dendritic drainage morphology across the 4,253 km² basin facilitated efficient runoff concentration, while historical accounts note the river's role in supporting riparian agriculture without recorded perennial dry-outs prior to modern interventions.

Current Water Availability and Extraction

The Arkavathi River maintains critically low water availability, with natural surface flows largely absent across much of its course as of 2024, primarily due to upstream over-extraction and reduced recharge from and . In the lower basin, the river frequently appears as a dry channel, particularly during non-monsoon periods, with baseflows insufficient to sustain flow. Measurements conducted in September 2024 upstream of the Thippagondanahalli Reservoir recorded minimal discharge, underscoring the river's transition to intermittent status. The Thippagondanahalli Reservoir (TG Halli), the principal impoundment on the Arkavathi, holds negligible natural storage volumes, with the Bangalore Water Supply and Sewerage Board reporting no dependable inflow from the river basin and reliance on inter-basin transfers from the Cauvery River to partially replenish it. As of September 2024, the Arkavathi ceased contributing any flow to TG Halli, rendering the reservoir defunct for indigenous supply purposes. Historical storage capacities, once supporting significant portions of Bengaluru's water needs, have diminished dramatically, with levels dropping to unsustainable lows exacerbated by siltation and evaporation losses. Water extraction from the Arkavathi basin centers on groundwater abstraction, predominantly for agriculture, which has accelerated aquifer depletion and curtailed surface contributions to the river. Surface water withdrawals, including from TG Halli for urban and irrigation uses, are now minimal and unsustainable without external augmentation, as basin-wide pumping exceeds recharge rates, perpetuating the cycle of flow reduction. Bengaluru's municipal extraction has shifted almost entirely to Cauvery sources, abandoning Arkavathi-dependent infrastructure due to chronic shortages.

Historical Development

Pre-Modern Utilization

The Arkavathi River supported pre-modern agricultural practices in its basin through traditional systems, characteristic of ancient and medieval . These man-made reservoirs, numbering in the hundreds, captured the river's seasonal flows to irrigate crops such as millets, pulses, and paddy during dry periods, enabling sustained settlements in districts like and . Historical records indicate that the basin featured interconnected networks, with upstream structures like those feeding Doddaballapur's Nagarakere channeling water for local farming communities predating colonial interventions. Religious and cultural sites along the river's upper reaches underscore its role in sustaining early human activity. The Bhoga Nandeeshwara Temple complex near the river's origin at Nandi Hills, initially constructed in the 9th century CE by the Bana dynasty and later expanded by Chola and rulers, depended on the perennial flow for ritual ablutions and supporting pilgrim populations. This proximity facilitated the temple's development as a regional spiritual center, with inscriptions attesting to land grants for maintenance tied to riverine resources. Villages flanking the river, such as those in the "Thore Saalu" tract, utilized its waters directly for domestic needs and small-scale anicuts for field inundation, fostering a agrarian economy resilient to monsoonal variability. Pre-colonial tank evolution in the broader Bangalore region, encompassing the Arkavathi watershed, involved community-managed structures like Kempambuddhi and Dharmambuddhi tanks, which exemplified decentralized water harvesting integral to the river's utilization.

Colonial and Mysore Kingdom Era

During the Mysore Kingdom period prior to major 19th-century engineering projects, the Arkavathi River supported local through traditional systems, including tanks and anicuts that captured seasonal flows for crop cultivation in the Bangalore region. These methods relied on the river's natural flow from its origin at Nandi Hills, enabling sustenance of settlements and farming without large-scale dams. In the late , under the state's administration influenced by British engineering practices, the Hesaraghatta reservoir was constructed in 1894 across the Arkavathi River approximately 20 km northwest of Bangalore. Initiated by Dewan Sir to address the city's growing needs, the project cost ₹19.5 lakhs and facilitated Bangalore's first piped , commissioned in 1896. However, recurrent failures, including the drying of Hesaraghatta in 1922 and subsequent poor rains in 1925–1926, diminished its reliability. To mitigate these shortages, the Thippagondanahalli (TG Halli) reservoir, also known as Chamarajasagara, was developed in at the confluence of the Arkavathi and Kumudvathi rivers. Supervised by engineer during his earlier tenure as , the dam aimed to restore and expand Bangalore's infrastructure, marking a key advancement in river utilization under the princely state's governance. These reservoirs shifted reliance from diffuse tank systems to centralized storage, reflecting adaptive responses to urban demands and climatic variability in the colonial-influenced era.

Post-Independence Infrastructure

Following Indian independence in 1947, infrastructure development on the Arkavathi River focused on expanding capacity and supporting urban water needs amid rising demand from Bengaluru's growth, though major new constructions were limited compared to pre-independence efforts. The Manchanabele Dam, built across the river downstream of the Tippagondanahalli Reservoir, primarily serves for surrounding agricultural lands and provides potable water to town. In 1994, a new reservoir was constructed near Hesaraghatta across the Arkavathi to supplement Bengaluru's supply, augmenting the older Hesaraghatta established in the late . This addition aimed to capture seasonal flows for treatment and distribution via pipelines to the city. The Arkavathi Medium Project, encompassing command area development and networks linked to existing reservoirs, was completed post-independence to enhance in the basin's rural districts. These initiatives relied on the river's tributaries and but faced challenges from upstream abstractions and , limiting long-term efficacy.

Decline and Degradation

Onset of Depletion in Mid-20th Century

The onset of depletion in the Arkavathi River basin manifested in the mid-20th century, particularly from the , as evidenced by initial reductions in and flooding during seasons. This period marked a transition from traditional tank-based systems to widespread extraction for , which began surging in the and replaced dependencies. levels started declining as pumping intensified, leading to diminished contributions to the river, a key component of sustained flow beyond rainy periods. Inflows to the Tippagondanahalli (TG Halli) Reservoir, a critical gauge for the river's , remained relatively stable from 1938 to 1975 at a of approximately 385 million liters per day (MLD), but early signs of stress appeared with the expansion of irrigated . By the late 1970s, sharp declines ensued, with post-2000 inflows dropping to 65 MLD, reflecting cumulative depletion upstream. Empirical analyses attribute this primarily to human-induced overdraft rather than rainfall variability, which has shown no significant long-term decrease since the 1970s. The shift to irrigation, enabled by subsidized and tube wells post-independence, disconnected the hydrological regime, reducing -river connectivity and exacerbating dry-season flows. Urbanization in Bengaluru, accelerating in the , compounded extraction pressures by increasing municipal demand on local sources, though upstream agricultural abstractions were the dominant causal factor in basin-wide depletion. Historical records indicate that reduced flooding, noted in the mid-20th century, correlated with land-use changes, including the introduction of water-intensive crops and plantations like , which further strained resources. These developments initiated a feedback loop of declining surface flows and over-reliance on deeper , setting the stage for the river's progressive drying by the and beyond.

Pollution Escalation from Urbanization

Urbanization in Bengaluru, accelerating from the 1980s with the city's emergence as an IT hub, has exponentially increased impervious surfaces and in the Arkavathi basin, leading to heightened runoff laden with contaminants and overwhelming . By 2020, built-up areas in the basin had doubled due to westward expansion toward , converting permeable agricultural and forested lands into concrete expanses that prevent natural filtration and accelerate pollutant transport into the river. This shift has resulted in untreated or partially treated from Bengaluru and nearby towns like and being discharged directly, elevating organic loads and pathogens. Water quality parameters reflect this escalation, with chemical oxygen demand (COD) levels in river samples reaching 360–500 mg/L, far exceeding safe thresholds for aquatic life and indicating severe organic pollution from domestic wastewater. Biochemical oxygen demand (BOD) and total coliform counts have similarly surged; for instance, coliform bacteria increased multifold between 2018 and 2023, rendering stretches unfit even for irrigation. Urban runoff exacerbates this by mobilizing sediments and nutrients from construction sites and roads, contributing to eutrophication and oxygen depletion downstream of urban confluences. Industrial expansion in peri-urban zones, tied to Bengaluru's , has introduced persistent toxins including like mercury, industrial chemicals, and banned pesticides such as and , detected in sediments and water via targeted sampling in 2024–2025. These contaminants stem from discharges insufficiently regulated amid rapid factory proliferation, with of water chemistry linking urban-industrial sources to 40–60% of variance in profiles. Land use mapping corroborates causation, showing a between increased urban coverage (from ~10% in 1990 to over 25% by 2020 in key sub-basins) and downstream spikes in fecal indicators and heavy metal concentrations, underscoring inadequate capacity—Bengaluru's plants handle only ~50% of generated volume as of 2023. This has transformed the once-vital Arkavathi into a conduit for urban waste, with half its length classified as critically polluted by state assessments in the 2020s.

Environmental and Ecological Impacts

Water Quality Deterioration

The water quality of the Arkavathi River has deteriorated significantly due to untreated sewage discharge, industrial effluents, and agricultural runoff, rendering much of it unsuitable for drinking or irrigation without treatment. Biochemical oxygen demand (BOD) levels have reached as high as 72 mg/L at sites like Hesaraghatta reservoir, indicating severe organic pollution far exceeding permissible limits for potable water. The Central Pollution Control Board (CPCB) ranked the Arkavathi as Karnataka's most polluted river in assessments conducted around 2025, with dissolved oxygen levels often dropping below critical thresholds, exacerbating hypoxic conditions harmful to aquatic life. Heavy metal contamination, including mercury, lead, chromium, and cadmium, has been detected in river water and sediments at concentrations surpassing irrigation and standards set by the (BIS). A 2024 Central Water Commission (CWC) report highlighted elevated mercury and levels, alongside banned pesticides like and , originating from upstream industrial and agricultural activities in the Bangalore region. Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), known carcinogens, further compound toxicity, with sources traced to urban runoff and untreated from Bangalore's expanding peri-urban areas. Eutrophication has intensified due to high and inputs from fertilizers and , leading to algal blooms that deplete oxygen and disrupt ecosystems. In the Tippagondanahalli Reservoir, a key storage for Bangalore's , escalated to the point where pumping for ceased in August 2012, primarily due to persistent and . (COD) remains elevated from biodegradable and non-biodegradable effluents, correlating with urban growth since the 1980s, when Bangalore's population surge overwhelmed infrastructure. These pollutants pose health risks including in fish and , affecting downstream communities reliant on the river for and domestic use. Despite monitoring by agencies like CPCB, enforcement gaps allow ongoing discharges, with studies indicating that agricultural regions contribute disproportionately to nutrient loads while urban zones drive . Restoration efforts, such as those proposed under notices in December 2024, emphasize the need for stricter effluent treatment to reverse this decline.

Biodiversity Loss and Habitat Changes

The desiccation of the Arkavathi River, exacerbated by over-extraction and upstream diversions, has led to extensive loss of aquatic habitats, transforming perennial stretches into seasonal or ephemeral channels incapable of supporting diverse fluvial ecosystems. Studies indicate that reduced flows since the 1970s have fragmented riverine environments, eliminating breeding grounds for and macroinvertebrates dependent on consistent depth and , while promoting the proliferation of drought-tolerant, invasive terrestrial along former riparian zones. Pollution from urban effluents and agricultural runoff has further accelerated decline, rendering much of the river eutrophic with levels exceeding thresholds for healthy aquatic life, as documented in assessments from early 2025. This nutrient overload favors blooms of pollution-tolerant such as Myxophyceae, which dominated samples from contaminated sites, while suppressing sensitive and higher trophic levels; surveys identified only 71 and 27 taxa overall, with diversity markedly lower downstream of Bengaluru compared to upstream references. Habitat degradation extends to riparian corridors, where hydrological alterations have shifted native gallery forests and wetlands toward degraded scrublands, diminishing foraging and nesting sites for avian and mammalian species reliant on moist microclimates. Eucalyptus plantations, expanded since the mid-20th century, have intercepted rainfall and lowered water tables, compounding vegetation succession away from hydrophytic communities and toward xerophytes, thereby reducing overall basin resilience.

Controversies

Governance and Policy Failures

Governance of the Arkavathi River basin has been hampered by fragmented institutional structures, including overlapping mandates among entities such as the Bangalore Water Supply and Sewerage Board (BWSSB), State Pollution Control Board (KSPCB), and local gram panchayats, leading to poor coordination and ineffective implementation of water management strategies. The Act of 2011, intended to curb over-extraction, remained unimplemented due to the absence of finalized mechanisms, exacerbating unregulated pumping that contributed to a net depletion of 200,000 million liters in the Bengaluru Metropolitan Area between 1975 and 2000. Policy shortcomings have prioritized short-term urban water supply from distant sources like the Cauvery River over sustainable basin-level conservation, with no formal system for allocating water rights across domestic, agricultural, and industrial users despite national guidelines emphasizing domestic priority. The proposed Arkavathi and Kumudvathi River Basin Conservation and Development Bill of 2013 failed to be enacted, leaving upstream catchment areas vulnerable to encroachments and quarrying; for instance, a 2003 preservation notification for the Thippagondanahalli Reservoir (TG Halli) catchment was violated by over 400 illegal quarries by 2009, with government attempts to withdraw it in 2014 stayed by the amid allegations of collusion with private interests. Enforcement lapses by pollution control authorities have permitted persistent industrial and discharges, as evidenced by the (NGT) issuing notices in December 2024 to the (CPCB) and KSPCB over elevated levels of mercury, , and hydrocarbons in Arkavathi samples, indicating violations of standards. Only about 20% of Bengaluru's was treated as of the early 2010s, allowing untreated effluents to degrade the river, while recent plans for industrial areas in contaminated catchment zones, such as a 420-acre project in Zone-1 of TG Halli despite known heavy metal pollution, underscore ongoing regulatory inadequacies. Catchment protection policies have been undermined by decisions to reduce buffer zones along the Arkavathi and Kumudvathy rivers, with 2019 and 2021 government orders halving protections from 1 km or more, criticized for facilitating development at the expense of recharge and pollution prevention; these moves conflicted with High Court directives and were further stalled in 2025 when the Governor returned a related buffer zone amendment bill. Siltation management at TG Halli exemplifies neglect, with desilting efforts in 2020 dumping toxic sediments containing arsenic and lead into unlined quarries at a cost of Rs 22.7 crore, risking further groundwater contamination without adequate remediation protocols. These failures have reduced TG Halli inflows to 30 million liters per day from its designed 148 million liters per day capacity, rendering it largely defunct for Bengaluru's supply since the 1990s.

Attribution of Causation: Human vs. Natural Factors

The long-term decline in the Arkavathy River's flow, evidenced by sharp reductions in inflows to the T.G. Halli reservoir since the 1970s, is predominantly caused by anthropogenic factors including excessive pumping for and deforestation-driven land-use changes in the watershed. These activities have reduced contributions from aquifers and diminished during monsoons, with quantitative modeling attributing over 70% of the depletion to such interventions rather than climatic shifts alone. Pollution exacerbating the river's degradation stems almost entirely from human sources, such as untreated sewage from urban Bengaluru, industrial effluents, and agricultural runoff laden with pesticides, fertilizers, and . Sampling across the basin has detected elevated levels of , mercury, and —exceeding Indian standards by factors of up to 10—directly linked to illegal discharges and intensified farming practices, with no comparable natural geochemical inputs identified. Natural factors, including monsoon rainfall variability and seasonal droughts inherent to the region's semi-arid climate, contribute to short-term flow fluctuations but fail to account for the sustained, multi-decadal drying trend, which correlates more strongly with post-1970s expansions in tube-well and urban encroachment. Hydrological assessments confirm that even under historical rainfall patterns, unaltered watersheds would sustain adequate flows, underscoring the primacy of human-induced hydrological alterations.

Rejuvenation Initiatives

Early Restoration Attempts

Restoration efforts targeting the Arkavathy River basin, particularly the Thippagondanahalli Reservoir (TGR), began in the amid observable declines in inflows and reservoir capacity due to and reduced upstream flows. These initial interventions, overseen by entities like the government and authorities, emphasized desilting to restore storage volume and basic measures to curb immediate catchment degradation, such as limited jungle clearance and encroachment controls around the reservoir perimeter. By the late 20th century, annual inflows into TGR had dropped significantly from historical averages, with data indicating a sharp reduction post-, underscoring the constrained impact of these measures. Further attempts in the and involved ad hoc mitigation, including proposals for improved management upstream, though implementation remained fragmented owing to rapid urbanization in Bengaluru and surrounding districts. The Bangalore Water Supply and Sewerage Board (BWSSB) explored oxygenation techniques to enhance in affected stretches, aiming to counteract from untreated effluents, but these were pilot-scale and did not scale to basin-wide restoration. Empirical assessments from hydrological studies reveal that groundwater over-extraction and conversion of permeable lands to impervious surfaces in the upper catchment—exacerbated by eucalyptus plantations—outpaced these localized fixes, perpetuating flow deficits. Overall, early restoration initiatives suffered from a symptomatic approach, neglecting integrated and enforcement against upstream diversions, resulting in negligible reversal of the river's trend by the turn of the millennium. Government reports note that while some short-term capacity gains were achieved at TGR through periodic , sustained recharge failed without addressing causal factors like altered . These efforts laid groundwork for later programs but highlighted the necessity for holistic, evidence-based strategies grounded in basin-scale data.

Contemporary Government Programs

In June 2025, the government established a high-level expert committee to oversee the of the Arkavathi River through a public-private (PPP) model, spearheaded by the Bangalore Water Supply and Sewerage Board (BWSSB). The initiative targets a 53.73 km stretch from Nandi Hills to the Tippagondanahalli (TG Halli) reservoir, encompassing a basin area of 1,449 square kilometers across four districts and 734 villages. Key components include the construction of sewage treatment plants (STPs) to address untreated wastewater inflows, flood control measures to mitigate seasonal overflows, and the development of riverfront parks for enhanced urban integration and revenue generation. The PPP framework draws inspiration from national efforts like the Namami Gange program and the restoration in , emphasizing sustainable financing through private investment in infrastructure that generates returns via eco-tourism and commercial spaces. BWSSB initiated planning in early 2025, with the expert panel tasked to integrate scientific assessments, community input, and long-term monitoring to restore flow and . The State Pollution Control Board (KSPCB) supports these efforts with a proposed focusing on abatement, including at sites like TG Halli and Dam, though implementation details remain aligned with the PPP timeline. As of mid-2025, no specific funding allocations or completion targets have been publicly detailed beyond the committee's formation, reflecting ongoing coordination between state agencies and private stakeholders.

NGO and Scientific Interventions

WWF-India, through its Climate Solutions Partnership, implemented a four-year wetland restoration project employing nature-based solutions to revive a 31 km degraded stretch of the Arkavathi River basin from Nandi Hills to Hesaraghatta. Methods included installing floating islands with aquatic plants for water purification and biodiversity support, de-weeding channels, repairing bunds for water regulation, and deploying solar-powered floating fountains for aeration at sites like Nagarakere. Community engagement via the Wetland Mitra program mobilized over 1,000 volunteers for assessments, cleanliness drives, and borewell monitoring, while training farmers to reduce pesticide application. In the Bashettihalli wetland (restored 2016-2019), these efforts increased water holding capacity by 60%, removed 190,000 cubic meters of silt, planted over 1,000 native saplings, raised groundwater levels by 100 feet, and improved the site's health ranking from E to D. A hydrocensus surveyed groundwater quality across 125 borewells in a 650 sq km area, and health scorecards were developed for 41 headwater wetlands. Paani.Earth, in collaboration with the International Centre for Clean Water, conducted a scientific assessment in February-March 2024, analyzing 65 water and 20 parameters at seven sites along the Arkavathi and Vrishabhavathi rivers during the . The study detected elevated emerging contaminants, including pesticides like and exceeding U.S. EPA guidelines by up to 25,022 times, heavy metals such as mercury surpassing Canada's Sediment Quality Guidelines by 26 times, and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons like dibenz[a,h]anthracene over U.S. EPA limits by 3,076 times, with high levels linked to at all sites and intensifying downstream of urban and industrial zones. Recommendations emphasized expanded monitoring for such pollutants, mandating limits in detergents, and strengthening controls on point-source discharges alongside improved to inform basin-wide remediation. Additional scientific analyses have proposed remediation strategies grounded in water quality data, such as enhanced catchment management and source tracing to address - and agriculture-driven degradation in the basin. These efforts complement government initiatives by providing empirical baselines for targeted interventions, though implementation remains challenged by persistent non-point sources.

References

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