Land of milk, honey,…. and high hydraulic heads !
Can hydraulic heads be used as an indicator of a society’s level of
advancement?
The
other day, while taking a shower under a stinging high-flow shower -head,
I realized that
I have rarely come across such high pressures in domestic water faucets
in India. That set me thinking - can hydraulic heads be used as an
indicator of a society’s level of advancement? Analysts have used nearly
every conceivable indicator from per capita calorific intake to per
capita dental expenses, so why not add one more? A brief hydraulics
class is in order before I make my point.
Hydraulic head, as a layman
would know it and feel it, is the pressure with which water shoots (or
trickles) out when a bathroom or kitchen faucet is turned on. In
physical terms, the water pressure in your domestic faucet is only
kinetic energy manifesting itself. This kinetic energy is a converted
form of the potential energy (or hydraulic head) that builds up in water
when it is pumped up to its perch in the overhead water tank. This
potential energy, in turn, is the converted form of the electrical
energy involved in operating the pump which forces the water upwards.
So, hydraulic head = energy. Which is to say that taking a bath is
probably as energy-consumptive as running a light bulb for a certain
amount of time, even if it is just cold water. But few people who have
had running water all their lives will ever fully appreciate the value
of a healthy hydraulic head. My home in Rajasthan for a couple of years
had a community hand-pump as the only source of water. In peak summer,
when groundwater levels dropped downwards of 110 feet and every drop had
to be drawn up manually, one couldn't but marvel at the miracle that a
self-flowing faucet is.
The remarkable thing about a
hydraulic head is that it is an indicator of more than just availability
of electricity and water. Much political machination goes in to aid or
debar the distribution of hydraulic heads in society. For example, the
valley people of Narmada fought for years to not allow the lowlanders of
Gujarat to create the dam they needed to build up enough hydraulic head
to send water all the way to Kutch. Urban elite in India whine their
heads off about groundwater exploitation when farmers throw in deep
tubewells to get just enough head to water a field of rajka. At the same
time, most of India’s success stories have been built around robust
hydraulic heads. The Gangetic plains would never have been the cradle of
civilization if Bhagwan Shiv had, instead of tying up Ganga in his
locks, allowed her to expend all her hydraulic head in one fell swoop to
the ground. Closer in time, the Green Revolution was arguable based on
the heads created behind Nehru’s temples, and Kurien’s brilliant White
Revolution in Gujarat was built on the hydraulic head behind the Mahi
dam.
Verily, the hydraulic head
(which is measured in metres or feet) is as robust an indicator of
prosperity and wellness as Friedman’s Index of Economic Freedom or such.
Why not just say "Kerala is 3 feet happy while Bihar is only a few
inches happy" instead of parading acronyms to explain simple stuff like
the economists do? Furthermore, little is required to survey a
population for this indicator. No fancy PhDs, no intricately designed
questionnaires, no deligent interviewers, and no patient interviewees
are needed. Just a batallion of boys with a bucket and a stop watch to
measure faucet discharge running from door to door and reporting their
findings to a babu armed with a calculator and the hydraulic energy
formula and, lo and behold, you have a barometer of prosperity stuck
right into any society’s armpit.
But the narrative of hydraulic
heads takes a paradoxical twist when it comes to modern Western
civilizations, which are supposed to be advanced. True, hydraulic heads
are impressive almost universally here. But then what kink of God’s work
or the Shaitan’s mischief is it that Men in this land of ever-flowing
water use paper to wipe their dirty hands, and worse? q
Rahul Ranade
r.ranade@gmail.com
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