The audit’s findings on the state of lakes in Jammu and Kashmir are not just a technical report; they are a wake-up call about the scale of ecological loss unfolding in the region. More than seventy per cent of natural lakes have either disappeared or shrunk since the late 1960s, stripping away ecosystems that once sustained biodiversity, moderated floods, and supported livelihoods. The disappearance of over three hundred lakes and the shrinkage of hundreds more is not only an ecological tragedy but a social and economic one. These water bodies have historically sustained agriculture, fisheries, and tourism, while also serving as cultural landmarks. Their decline erodes livelihoods, diminishes food security, and weakens resilience against climate shocks.
The findings show that the degradation is not accidental but the result of unchecked land-use changes, deforestation, and unregulated construction. Encroachments into catchment areas, untreated sewage, and reckless urban expansion have turned once-thriving ecosystems into stagnant pools or barren land. The absence of a dedicated legal framework has allowed fragmented responsibilities across departments, leaving accountability diffuse and conservation efforts sporadic.
The ecological imbalance is already visible. Loss of wetlands has reduced bird populations, aquatic vegetation, and fish diversity. Communities that depended on these resources now face declining incomes and food shortages. The shrinking of lakes also undermines groundwater recharge, worsening water scarcity in a region already vulnerable to climate variability. The audit rightly points out that the disappearance of lakes contributed to the catastrophic floods of 2014, when natural buffers were no longer able to absorb excess water.
Equally troubling is the neglect of smaller lakes. While a handful of prominent waterbodies have received attention, hundreds remain ignored, even though their collective role in maintaining ecological balance is critical. The unexplained increase in the area of some lakes underscores the lack of scientific monitoring and analysis. Without systematic study, even positive changes remain poorly understood, depriving policymakers of insights that could guide restoration.
The way forward must be holistic. A centralised authority with scientific expertise is essential to coordinate conservation efforts. Hydrologists, ecologists, and GIS specialists must be deployed to map, monitor, and restore these ecosystems. Sewage treatment plants, strict regulation of construction, and catchment protection must be implemented without delay. Public awareness campaigns should remind communities that lakes are not expendable but vital to survival.
Financial commitment is equally important as the conservation cannot be achieved on token budgets. Increased allocation, coupled with transparent utilisation, is necessary to ensure that plans translate into action. The audit’s call for structured, time-bound programmes must be heeded, with clear milestones and accountability mechanisms.
The lakes of Jammu and Kashmir are more than scenic landscapes; they are living systems that embody resilience and heritage. Their disappearance is a warning that the region is on the brink of ecological collapse. To restore them is to restore balance, security, and dignity to the people who depend on them. The audit has sounded the alarm with clarity. The challenge now is whether those entrusted with stewardship of nature will act with urgency, or allow silence to settle over waters that once sustained life.
The loss of 518 lakes is not just a local crisis but a national concern. These ecosystems are part of India’s natural heritage, and their degradation undermines broader climate goals. Protecting them is not charity but necessity, for without healthy lakes, the region faces worsening floods, declining biodiversity, and vanishing livelihoods. The time for fragmented measures has passed; what is needed now is a comprehensive law, a unified authority, and a commitment to treat these water bodies as lifelines.
