A national survey by the Union Ministry of Jal Shakti has revealed serious levels of groundwater contamination in Telangana, with fluoride, nitrate, and other chemicals exceeding the safe limits. The findings, detailed in the State-specific ‘Groundwater Quality Year Book of Telangana State, 2025’, indicate that nearly 28 districts are plagued by excess fluoride, while nitrate levels surpass permissible thresholds in 32 out of 33 districts, making Telangana the third-worst affected State nationally for nitrate pollution.
Major sources of the contamination remain agricultural runoff and industrial effluents. Ironically, monsoon recharges are taking the pollutants deeper into aquifers. The survey, conducted by the Central Ground Water Board (CGWB) under the Ministry of Jal Shakti, represents one of India’s most extensive annual assessments of groundwater quality.
Launched as part of the Ministry’s mandate to monitor and safeguard water resources, the 2024 edition involved collecting over 25,000 samples nationwide from wells, boreholes and hand pumps used for drinking and irrigation.
In Telangana alone, the project focused on 1,150 samples analysed for key parameters including electrical conductivity (EC), pH, fluoride, nitrate, chloride, bicarbonate, calcium, iron, arsenic and heavy metals.
Samples were collected in two phases, pre-monsoon (typically March to May, capturing dry-season concentrations) and post-monsoon days reflecting recharge effects.
The samples were tested at accredited laboratories, including the National Institute of Hydrology’s facility in Hyderabad, using standardized methods aligned with Bureau of Indian Standards (BIS) guidelines.
Even the fluoride levels worsened in six of nine Hyderabad sites. This ‘pollution push’ occurs as heavy rains infiltrate surface pollutants, such as agricultural nitrates from fertilisers and urban sewage, directly into shallow aquifers, accelerating leaching of salts, minerals and residues.
Nationally, the report flags a 2.27 per cent rise in fluoride-affected areas since 2022, but Telangana’s escalation is acute.
Fluoride exceedances jumped significantly between 2017 and 2024, with 14.8 pc of samples now surpassing the BIS permissible limit of 1.5 mg/L and the desirable safe limit of 1.0 mg/L.
District-wise, the contamination paints a dire picture. Nalgonda, infamous for fluorosis hotspots, remains impacted, but the crisis has spread recently. Pre-monsoon excess fluoride (>;1.0 mg/L) was detected in Nagarkurnool, Rangareddy, Yadadri Bhongir, Jangaon, Warangal, Hanamkonda, Hyderabad, Medchal Malkajgiri and Nalgonda. Overall hotspots include Hanamkonda, Warangal, Jagtial, Jangaon, Nagarkurnool, Karimnagar, Khammam, Rangareddy and Nalgonda, spanning 28 of 33 districts.
In Hyderabad, even urban borewells showed post-monsoon spikes, with three sites deteriorating sharply.
Nitrate, exceeding the 45 mg/L BIS limit in 27.48 pc of Telangana samples (third-highest nationally after Rajasthan and Karnataka), affects 32 districts uniformly, driven by nitrogen-based fertilisers in intensive farming. Chloride levels, while not as prominently detailed, follow bicarbonate as the second-most prevalent issue statewide, contributing to overall salinity.
High concentrations were implied in arid zones like Gadwal. Other chemicals, such as calcium and bicarbonate from irrigation runoff, dominate, with elevated calcium linked to widespread kidney stones and urinary tract disorders.
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