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Bangladesh
: Water Resources
About
two thirds of the cultivable land at Bangladesh
are prone to flood damagc every years.
Thus flood control and drainage improvement
are crucial for the national economy in
order to reduce or prevent damage to crops
and infrastructure. Since agriculture
and water resources arc linked, increasing
food grain production requires water management
through flood control, drainage and irrigation.
The dual problem of shortage of water
during the dry season and its abundance
in rainy season are critical in the development
and management of water resources in Bangladesh.
Being the lower riparian of the three
major rivers of the world-the Ganges,
the Brahmaputra and the Meghna-Bangladesh
could not undertake meaningful water development
in the past in order to properly harness
their flows for the benefit of the people.
The historic Ganges Water sharing Treaty
signed with India on 12 December, 1996,
has opened up newer avenues for offsetting
the negative impact of Farakka Barrage
and tapping the potentials of water resources
in the country. Opportunities have also
opened up for regional. sub-regional and
basin-wide development and management
of water for mutual benefit. It is in
this backdrop that the Ganges Barrage
has been taken up by the present government
for implementation.
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