2nd in the Thirsty Giant series
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TEJA KA BAS, India — Bhanwar Lal Yadav, once a cultivator of cucumber and wheat, has all but given up growing food. No more suffering through drought and the scourge of antelope that would destroy what little would survive on his fields.
Today he has reinvented himself as a vendor of what counts here as the most precious of commodities: the water under his land.
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If groundwater can be thought of as a nation’s savings account for dry, desperate drought years, then India, which has more than its share of them, is rapidly exhausting its reserve. That situation is true in a growing number of states.
Indian surveyors have divided the country into 5,723 geographic blocks. More than 1,000 are considered either overexploited, meaning more water is drawn on average than is replenished by rain, or critical, meaning they are dangerously close to it.
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http://www.nytimes.com/2006/09/30/world/asia/30water2.html?pagewanted=1&ei=5094&en=d2aae862bcec6ce9&hp&ex=1159675200&partner=homepage