INDICUS Authored By: Dr. Laveesh Bhandari Co-Authored By: Aarti Khare, Peeyush Bajpai, Mridusmita Bordoloi, Amar Gujral, Dhyan Singh 1 Poor Provision of Household Water: Environmental Impact & Private Response Laveesh Bhandari & Aarti Khare INDICUS Abstract Lack of funds, and generally poor municipal governance has contributed to a situation where much of urban India does not obtain 24 hour water. This has prompted individual households to undertake self-supply measures such as boring underground to access sub-surface water. This has contributed to the dramatic fall in sub-surface water levels and associated environmental damage. In parallel, a large private sector is emerging in water supply though illegally. Indian laws, partly due to environmental considerations, do not allow private operators to undertake water supply using sub-surface water. In fact, policy has directly or indirectly, discouraged any type of private sector activity in water supply. However, these laws are proving to be un-enforceable due to inability of the local governments to satisfy the demand for water. If the private sector is included and not excluded from water supply and in a legal manner, both coverage and environment would benefit. Key Words: Poor, Household, Provision, Water, Environment, Private, Response, Urban, 24 hours, India, Laws, Municipal, Sub-surface, Supply, Government, Local, Coverage, Perennial, LPCD, Usage, Kilolitre, Delhi, Public, Energy, Cost, Cities, Scarcity, Supply, Tap, Domestic, Demand, Tank, Tube well, Indicus Analytics, Laveesh Bhandari, Aarti Khare. We would like to thank Peeyush Bajpai, Mridusmita Bordoloi, Amar Gujral, and Dhyan Singh for their useful comments and invaluable support. All errors are ours. Comments appreciated at mail@indicus.net