 Gurgaon is a highly unsustainable, untenable kind of city development. This is one city which had no master plan. The importance of Gurgaon was because it is next to South-South Delhi and also the airport. So we made a study and found out because of the two major factors. Extreme, acute shortage of water, underground water or water or water. Rainfall also is very small, only about 600 mm. And also no natural drainage. There's 15-20 mm Gurgaon in front. Imagine if Gurgaon had that 100 mm. The whole city would have been floating. Now that what you see now is called high-rise high-density. So we have decided that Gurgaon can have only low-rise, low-density development. So we have decided that let's not have any large interstitial. So we said that Gurgaon will only have electronic industries, which will be non-polluting, non-water-consuming and comparatively small. In 1991 we had the liberalisation. So foreign companies, FDA, everything FDA, FDA, FDA and a lot of foreign companies came. For them, the cost here was nothing. So there was a massive boom and based on that boom, politicians came in, brokers came in, real estate dealers came in, a lot of cash, real estate business as you know is 60% cash. A lot of cash went round and town planning norms were just not adhered to at all. So there is a proper scientific analysis which is possible, where we analyse the total terrain of the city and see that when the natural rain will occur, where the water will flow, is it being carried by the natural drain which is already existing? Is that drainage sufficient? Because over the years when you keep on increasing the paved area, the volume of water for the same rainfall keeps on increasing as the pavement goes on higher and higher. Where that water will go? If it won't go anywhere by your design, then it will flood the area. Similarly, if we look at the solid waste management, if the solid waste is being dumped into these natural drains which get blocked because of the solid waste being dumped, then again the flooding will occur. So the distribution is also, whereas there is no stoppage, no restriction in terms of usage of water in the high-rise buildings and things like that, there is a lot of restrictions on the use of water also for the poor community. But there is a complete sense of denial of migration. There is a complete underiginess to count migrants. So if you are going to have 25 lakh people living in Gurgaon, but you are going to say that only 10 lakh live, then automatically you have a very fundamental problem where you are not going to be planning for 25 lakh people. You are not going to be planning for where is the water going to come from? Where is the drinking water going to come from? When that water is consumed, the water that is wasted, where will the water go? Where will it go? So for this, first of all, the administration is not serious here, what should be done. Because the waste that is being watered for, no one complains about it. Because if we work in the field, then it is our experience. For 2-4 months, we keep saying that there is no water waste in any country, there is a leakage of water, the road is being washed, then it should be seen. So before the road is built, before the road is built, the water line should be put in a way so that the problem does not come again and again. We make systems, but we don't follow systems. And the other major issue is that there is no accountability. Yes, we foresaw this water crisis, and we also foresaw the drainage problem. What we are recommending is that the locality water which is now going into the sewer lines, can it be taken to a nearby lawn by creating additional storage in the lawn, by depressing the present level to around by one feet. So that will create or generate a very huge volume of water. And this volume of water will be clean water. It will be ultimately seeping into the ground and adding to the groundwater recharge. Technically, every inch of road in Gurgaon, that's a village road or whether it's a sector road or whether it's a highway cutting through Gurgaon, must have rainwater harvesting along every inch of that road. And the minute you have that, you have two problems being solved automatically. A, there is a high density of roads in Gurgaon. And the more you tar the surfaces, the less there's percolation into the ground. So A, you'll have roads not breaking because roads break when there's water logging. The other is you'll actually have groundwater levels going up. That can only happen when there is a very strict policy plan it's in the master plan, it's in the law that not a single road can be built without water harvesting drains running alongside. Only to the extent of about two to three percent rate water harvesting structures are effective and efficient at the moment, that is what the reports are showing. So given this particular situation, this area needs citizens mobilization. We have sat together and come to know who all can help us also. Even the municipal commissioner finds this as very rewarding because he also has promised, but at the same time when we see the public consultation as it took place, the focus didn't come on water. So there's a lot of lip service till now on the issue of water and wastewater from the people who matter here. But I think citizens will have to really bring pressure on officials as well as on various other agencies and so on and so forth.