|
Basics
of Rain Water Harvesting (RWH)
What is RWH?
Rain Water
Harvesting is a way to capture the rain water when it rains, store that water
above ground or charge the underground and use it later. This happens naturally
in open rural areas. But in congested, over-paved metropolitan cities, we need
to create methods to capture the rain water.
A sample
urban installation
- Roof rainwater collection - in a metropolitan city
· If you live
in a single dwelling house or a multi-tenant apartment complex, you already have
80% of the RWH system. We just need re-orient the plumbing design.
· The present
design of the house will take all the rainwater from the roof and all the ground
level areas surrounding the house and flow the water towards the street. (where
it floods the street, clogs the storm drains and sewer lines for a few days,
before flowing away as sewage water)
· From the
roof tops, bring the rainwater down using closed PVC pipes and direct it to a
sump. Include a simple 3-part filteration unit consisting of sand, brick jelly
and broken mud bricks
· If you do
not have sump, use a well. In many parts of the country, old wells when they go
dry, is used as garbage dumps. Please clean the well and put the rain water into
it.
· If you do
not have a well, construct a baby well (about 2ft in diameter and about 16 feet
deep based on soil structure)
· Other types
of RWH - collect the ground water and stop their flow at the gate. Put a
concrete slab with holes in it, build a 2 feet deep pit, across the full width
of the gate. Collect and connect a pipe and flow the water to a well or a baby
well.
Costs
All
costs are subject to local variations in different parts of India. Use these
figures for budgetary purposes only.
· Most often,
the cost is from the PVC pipes. A 4" diameter PVC pipe costs Rs xx per
linear foot. A 5" pipe costs lot more than a 4" pipe.
· If you do
not have a sump, include about Rs 5 per litre of water storage. So, a 10,000
litre size sump will cost Rs 50,000. (For a family of 4, using about 80 litres
per day per person, this 10,000 litre size sump will contain 1 month's water
needs for this family.
· If you do
not have old style well - 6' to 8' diameter and about 60 feet deep, it will cost
about Rs 5,000.
If you wish to
construct a baby well, it may cost around Rs 2,500
Benefits
· A water
tanker bringing water from unknown sources and untested for its quality will
cost about Rs 1000 to Rs 2500 for 10,000 litres of water.
· You cannot
put a price on 'peace of mind' knowing that you have water for a month.
Did you
know that..
· A well is
not for storing water. The well connects the surface to the underground water
sources. Based on the underground water availability during a rainy season, the
water level in the well will go up and down.
· Long after
the rains have stopped, the well gets its water from the underground sources
leaking into it.
· Where you
get water using a bore-well, rain water did percolate through any soil structure
at the ground level, including rocky, laterite rock surface.
· Every bore
well will eventually go dry, some sooner, some later.
· Use a bore
well in reverse. Use a dried up bore well to recharge the underground supply by
adding a percolation pit at the top
A sample
rural installation
- rain water collection - in a small village.
Recognize
first that 3 positive aspects of a village as it relates to water harvesting.
1. The village
population is about 500+ families or about 1,500+ residents.
2. Most
villages don't even have roads. There are no paved parking lots in a village.
3. A
villager's house is about 300 sq.feet - whether it is made of a thatched roof or
a concrete roof. Even if you collect the rain water from the roof or from the
sides, you often find kitchen waste water running in the middle of the street.
What types
of RWH makes sense in the rural areas?
a. Build
community wells in a few places in the village. Within 10-20 feet from the well,
construct a bore-well using a hand-operated pump. Educate the villagers to keep
the area around the well and the bore well clean - no washing (human, cattle,
motor cycles, clothing), no defecation.
b. If there
are existing water tanks in the village, desilt and dredge them every 3 years.
c. If there
are any small rivers or streams, build check-dams across them to hold the rain
water for usage after the rains have stopped.
http://akash-ganga-rwh.com/RWH/WaterHarvesting.html
Rainwater
Harvesting calculator
|