✅ 50 CUET English MCQs | The Hindu Editorial Analysis | Water Conservation & Comprehension Tricks #CUETUG2025
The role of communities in conserving water: The Hindu
On March 22, World Water Day, Prime Minister Narendra Modi highlighted the need to conserve water for present and future generations through collective action. On the same day, the Ministry of Jal Shakti launched the Jal Shakti Abhiyan: Catch the Rain 2025, emphasising the importance of community participation in water conservation.
Issues for consideration
In the context of this occasion, it is important to take a panoramic view of India’s water policies, with a focus on rural areas. New environmental challenges and renewed understandings of ecosystems underscore the need to recalibrate rural water policies. The following issues must be considered by policymakers.
First, policies should ensure effective participation from communities and mainstream their ecological practices. Indigenous and local communities carry rich knowledge of their immediate ecosystems. Existing policies provide for their participation, but it is limited to the management of water sources; decision-making powers remain with state authorities. Further, policies have overlooked the need to identify and empower communities’ own ecological practices on water management. Rather, they have formalised water governance by introducing uniform practices. This is counter-intuitive to the objective of encouraging effective participation from communities.
Take, for example, Water User Associations (WUAs), which are statutory bodies set up in different States since the 1990s to further participatory irrigation management. Water users (or farmers) are members of these bodies. While the responsibility to manage irrigation sources has been transferred to them, they have little say in decision-making.
Second, water policies should consider the disproportionate vulnerability of certain groups to environmental crises. Subaltern social groups and economically marginalised individuals are more vulnerable to such crises than others. Within these groups, those located at the intersection of social and economic marginalisation are the most vulnerable. Therefore, it is crucial for policies to consider the interests of vulnerable groups. Concomitantly, policies must recognise their agency in managing water and ensure their participation in decision-making.
Third, policies must address the issue of fragmentation of water management. Here, fragmented management means that different parts of the ecosystem, such as forests, water, land, and biodiversity, are regulated by different policies and authorities. Such an approach fails to consider the interdependence of these constituents. While there have been some efforts towards taking an integrated approach, they are limited and ineffective. Since policies adopt a fragmented approach, they do not always achieve the desired goals, and in fact, adversely affect each other’s potential to do so.
A good example of an integrated approach comes from the ecological practices of rural communities in western India. For example, the practice of establishing orans. Orans are sacred forests which hold deep religious and cultural significance to local communities. Some communities have been establishing orans to serve an additional purpose — water conservation. By augmenting tree and grass cover, orans trap surface runoff and support in-situ rainwater harvesting. Such an appreciation about the interdependence of water with other constituents of the ecosystem is key to effective water management and conservation.
Fourth, globally, there has been a thrust on adopting a more-than-human perspective in environmental governance. This means considering the interests of the non-human environment in laws and policies that regulate the environment. This approach is based on the idea that the non-human environment has an intrinsic value, and so its interests must be considered in environmental policies. The judiciary has often subscribed to this approach and developed compelling jurisprudence recognising the rights of nature. However, water policies have overlooked this aspect. Their sole focus has been on human needs for water. Contrastingly, water management practices of some of the local communities in western India take a more holistic perspective to water governance. For example, the amount of water available for irrigation is partly dependent on its sufficient availability for animals.
A final issue is the impact of climate change on water. A recent report published in the journal Nature concluded that as global temperatures rise, the water gap in India will widen. Both climate and water policies must address the impact of climate change on water. Water policies must focus on creating climate-resilient water systems and increasing the climate resilience of existing systems; climate policies, particularly adaptation policies, should focus on building the resilience of ecosystems to water gaps.
Beyond the rhetoric
A common theme across these suggestions is that local and indigenous communities and their practices can support effective water management. Therefore, rural water policies should facilitate active engagement with communities. This means moving beyond the existing rhetoric of engagement, and centering communities’ voices in the decision-making process. While doing so, we must be mindful that communities’ practices may come with their own limitations which should be addressed through sensitisation and capacity building where required.
Here are 50 MCQs based on the passage “The Role of Communities in Conserving Water”, covering all the required topics:
✅ 50 CUET English MCQs | The Hindu Editorial Analysis | Water Conservation & Comprehension Tricks #CUETUG2025
Section 1: Vocabulary & Synonyms/Antonyms (10 MCQs)
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What is the meaning of the word “concomitantly” as used in the passage?
a) Separately
b) Simultaneously
c) Oppositely
d) Temporarily
✔️ Answer: (b) Simultaneously -
Choose the correct synonym for “vulnerability”.
a) Strength
b) Weakness
c) Resilience
d) Protection
✔️ Answer: (b) Weakness -
The antonym of “fragmented” is:
a) Unified
b) Broken
c) Scattered
d) Divided
✔️ Answer: (a) Unified -
The word “calibrate” in the passage means:
a) Ignore
b) Adjust
c) Destroy
d) Misuse
✔️ Answer: (b) Adjust -
The word “rhetoric” in the passage means:
a) Meaningless talk
b) Effective action
c) Practical steps
d) Academic discourse
✔️ Answer: (a) Meaningless talk -
Which of the following is the opposite of “integrated”?
a) Connected
b) Disjointed
c) Combined
d) Organized
✔️ Answer: (b) Disjointed -
The synonym of “augment” is:
a) Decrease
b) Increase
c) Destroy
d) Limit
✔️ Answer: (b) Increase -
The word “intrinsic” in the passage is closest in meaning to:
a) Fundamental
b) External
c) Optional
d) Superficial
✔️ Answer: (a) Fundamental -
The antonym of “holistic” is:
a) Partial
b) Complete
c) Inclusive
d) Comprehensive
✔️ Answer: (a) Partial -
The word “jurisprudence” means:
a) Legal principles
b) Economic policies
c) Community guidelines
d) Scientific research
✔️ Answer: (a) Legal principles
Section 2: One-Word Substitutions (5 MCQs)
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A system of rules governing the use of water resources is called:
a) Hydrology
b) Water Governance
c) Aquaculture
d) Irrigation Policy
✔️ Answer: (b) Water Governance -
A person who studies ecosystems and their impact on water conservation is called:
a) Economist
b) Environmentalist
c) Geologist
d) Hydrologist
✔️ Answer: (d) Hydrologist -
The scientific study of climate and its effects is called:
a) Anthropology
b) Meteorology
c) Ecology
d) Sociology
✔️ Answer: (b) Meteorology -
The practice of collecting and storing rainwater for later use is called:
a) Rainwater Harvesting
b) Water Recycling
c) Water Filtration
d) Water Diversion
✔️ Answer: (a) Rainwater Harvesting -
The process of turning land into desert due to environmental factors is called:
a) Deforestation
b) Desertification
c) Afforestation
d) Reforestation
✔️ Answer: (b) Desertification
Section 3: Reading Comprehension MCQs (10 MCQs)
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What is the main purpose of the passage?
a) To explain how orans are formed
b) To highlight community participation in water conservation
c) To discuss India’s irrigation challenges
d) To emphasize the importance of urban water policies
✔️ Answer: (b) To highlight community participation in water conservation -
According to the passage, what is a major flaw in current water policies?
a) They prioritize urban areas over rural areas
b) They do not integrate community ecological practices
c) They do not regulate water usage strictly
d) They focus too much on AI-based solutions
✔️ Answer: (b) They do not integrate community ecological practices -
Which community practice in western India supports water conservation?
a) Establishing sacred groves
b) Constructing large dams
c) Installing underground pipelines
d) Implementing desalination plants
✔️ Answer: (a) Establishing sacred groves -
What does the term “fragmented management” mean in the passage?
a) Dividing water resources into sections
b) Managing different ecosystem parts separately
c) Combining policies for effective governance
d) Using a single authority for water management
✔️ Answer: (b) Managing different ecosystem parts separately
Section 4: Grammar – Voices & Narration (5 MCQs)
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Change to passive voice: “The government launched the Jal Shakti Abhiyan.”
a) The Jal Shakti Abhiyan was launched by the government.
b) The government was launching the Jal Shakti Abhiyan.
c) The Jal Shakti Abhiyan launches the government.
d) The government has launched the Jal Shakti Abhiyan.
✔️ Answer: (a) The Jal Shakti Abhiyan was launched by the government. -
Change into indirect speech: “The Prime Minister said, ‘We must save water for future generations.'”
a) The Prime Minister said that they must save water.
b) The Prime Minister said that water was being saved.
c) The Prime Minister said that they had saved water.
d) The Prime Minister said that we must save water for future generations.
✔️ Answer: (d) The Prime Minister said that we must save water for future generations.
Section 5: Sentence Correction (5 MCQs)
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Identify the error: “Water conservation should not neglected by policymakers.”
a) “should not neglected” → “should not be neglected”
✔️ Answer: (a) “should not neglected” → “should not be neglected” -
Choose the correctly structured sentence:
a) Policymakers should ensure community participation in water management.
✔️ Answer: (a) Policymakers should ensure community participation in water management.
Section 6: Idioms & Phrases (5 MCQs)
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What does “go with the flow” mean?
a) Adapt to situations easily
b) Conserve water
✔️ Answer: (a) Adapt to situations easily -
What does “cry over spilled milk” mean?
a) Complain about past mistakes
✔️ Answer: (a) Complain about past mistakes