A stray dog crosses polluted Cooum River, a water body so polluted that it’s considered dead, in Chennai, India. AP
Retired Indian civil servant R. Devarajan with his wife Padmini sit at the terrace of their house equipped with rain water harvesting system in Chennai, India. AP
For Devarajan and Padmini, Chennai's acute water shortage has reinforced the wisdom of their decision years ago to install a rainwater harvesting system in their three-story home. AP
With the city regularly running low of water, the government wanted each house to have a similar system. But many ignored the rule. AP
With water collected during the two-month rainy period, Devarajan and Padmini – as well as the other residents of their building – have no issue with water, but they’re still careful. AP
Exacerbated by climate change, the booming population has far outpaced the city's public water supply, forcing individuals and businesses to embrace private solutions. AP
In the village of Pallam just outside Chennai, some 70 families draw lots to determine when they can draw from a communal well. Normally, there is no limit on water, but now, community leaders have rationed each family to two or three pots per day, supplemented by a weekly visit by a municipal water truck that fills one plastic drum per household. AP
A stray dog crosses polluted Cooum River, a water body so polluted that it’s considered dead, in Chennai, India. AP
Retired Indian civil servant R. Devarajan with his wife Padmini sit at the terrace of their house equipped with rain water harvesting system in Chennai, India. AP
For Devarajan and Padmini, Chennai's acute water shortage has reinforced the wisdom of their decision years ago to install a rainwater harvesting system in their three-story home. AP
With the city regularly running low of water, the government wanted each house to have a similar system. But many ignored the rule. AP
With water collected during the two-month rainy period, Devarajan and Padmini – as well as the other residents of their building – have no issue with water, but they’re still careful. AP
Exacerbated by climate change, the booming population has far outpaced the city's public water supply, forcing individuals and businesses to embrace private solutions. AP
In the village of Pallam just outside Chennai, some 70 families draw lots to determine when they can draw from a communal well. Normally, there is no limit on water, but now, community leaders have rationed each family to two or three pots per day, supplemented by a weekly visit by a municipal water truck that fills one plastic drum per household. AP
A stray dog crosses polluted Cooum River, a water body so polluted that it’s considered dead, in Chennai, India. AP