Officials shocked over extremely rare occurrence at critical reservoir: 'Has already crossed the 100-feet mark'
The onset of early seasonal rainfall has given a key Indian reservoir a much-needed boost to its water level.
The water level at the Krishnarajasagar reservoir, popularly known as KRS, surpassed 100 feet in May. According to the Bangalore Mirror, this is an extremely rare occurrence. Since records began in 1946, that level has only been reached in May three times.
"The reservoir has already crossed the 100-feet mark by May end. With the monsoon underway, we expect the reservoir to fill up quickly," an engineer told the outlet.
KRS supplies Bengaluru and the surrounding farmlands. Bengaluru, known as Bangalore until an official name change in 2014, is India's third-largest city and a major tech hub. The "Silicon Valley" of India has experienced rapid growth in recent years, but this expansion has also brought its share of problems, as its surface water has been depleted.
The area suffered a severe drought in 2024, which The Water Diplomat described as "the worst water crisis of the past 500 years." The city imposed water cuts to handle the crisis, but those measures were unevenly applied. As in Mumbai, poor, rural areas tend to feel the worst effects of water shortages before wealthier urban districts.
The monsoons came early this year. The heavy rainfall is the lifeblood of India's economy and vast agricultural sector, providing nearly 70% of its annual water needs, according to Reuters. The India Meteorological Department reported that the country as a whole is experiencing about 11% more seasonal rainfall than usual.
The good times are set to continue for India's tech hub, as the Indian Express reported that the KRS dam was full in June for the first time in its 84-year history. However, the country still faces significant challenges ahead as it grapples with water scarcity and severe heat waves.
A lake or reservoir filling back up is always a cause for celebration, but equally, it represents an opportunity to build on that good fortune with a call to action locally to conserve and protect precious water sources.
Do you think your city has good air quality?
Definitely
Somewhat
Depends on the time of year
Not at all
Click your choice to see results and speak your mind.
Join our free newsletter for good news and useful tips, and don't miss this cool list of easy ways to help yourself while helping the planet.
Solve the daily Crossword

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


New York Post
2 days ago
- New York Post
At least five people rescued from New Mexico mountain village after massive floods hit the area
Another afternoon of heavy rainfall on Thursday prompted flash flooding in the mountain village of Ruidoso, forcing the closure of roads and the rescue of at least five people who were trapped by the rushing water. The southern New Mexico community has been reeling this summer, with afternoon thunderstorms bringing more rain than the surrounding mountainsides can handle. Past wildfires have stripped the hills of trees and vegetation, leaving the Ruidoso area vulnerable to repeated flooding. 3 Another afternoon of heavy rainfall on Thursday prompted flash flooding in the mountain village of Ruidoso. AP It was less than three weeks ago that massive flooding killed three people and damaged hundreds of homes, resulting in state and federal disaster declarations. On Thursday, residents shared videos on social media that showed walls of muddy water coursing down creeks and over roads, ripping apart a mobile home and toppling trees along the way. Authorities were blocking traffic to keep vehicles out of the water as onlookers watched from higher ground. Forecasters with the National Weather Service routinely have been issuing flash-flood watches and warnings as the summer rainy season is in full force. 3 On Thursday, residents shared videos on social media that showed walls of muddy water coursing down creeks and over roads, ripping apart a mobile home and toppling trees along the way. Justin Portwood via REUTERS 3 Flood watches also were issued Thursday for parts of northern New Mexico, according to reports. Justin Portwood via REUTERS They reported Thursday that one stretch of the Rio Ruidoso had risen to roughly 12.5 feet (3.81 meters) as a result of the burn-scar flooding. Flood watches also were issued Thursday for parts of northern New Mexico around burn scars left by the 2022 Calf Canyon Hermit's Peak blazes.
Yahoo
3 days ago
- Yahoo
Video shows ceiling collapsing at Chongqing shopping centre, not airport
As heavy rains lashed southwest China in early July, a video was misleadingly shared in posts claiming it showed the roof of an airport in Chongqing collapsing. The footage in fact shows a section of ceiling collapsing at a shopping centre in the megacity, not an airport. "Airport roof crashed down in Chongquing (sic), China's 3rd largest industrialized city," reads the caption of a clip shared on X on July 9, 2025. The clip, which was viewed more than 3.3 million times, shows a section of ceiling suddenly giving way and drenching the floor underneath in dark-coloured water. Several people can be seen filming and stepping back as the liquid starts to spread. "China is at least 900 years ahead of India," adds the caption, in an apparent mocking reference to Indian opposition leader Rahul Gandhi saying that "China is 10 years ahead" of India (archived link). The post circulated as China endured a summer of extreme weather, with downpours battering much of the country's south for weeks (archived link). State media reported that the most recent deluge forced the evacuation of 556 people in Chongqing, and triggered a landslide in nearby Sichuan province. The clip was also shared in similar Facebook, Threads and X posts . While the footage was filmed in Chongqing, it does not show an airport in the megacity. As of July 25, there have been no official reports of the roof collapsing at any airports in Chongqing. A reverse image search on Chinese search engine Baidu using keyframes from the misleadingly shared clip led to the same footage published on Weibo by the Chongqing-based Sanxiang Metropolis Daily on July 8 (archived link). "In the afternoon of July 8, some netizens reported on social platforms that the ceiling of the B1 floor of Paradise Walk shopping centre in Chongqing suddenly collapsed," the post reads. Similar clips shared elsewhere on Weibo and Douyin also say they were filmed at the shopping centre in Chongqing (archived here and here). The Paradise Walk shopping centre said on its official Weibo page the collapse was caused by sudden heavy rainfall on July 8 (archived link). It added there were no injuries and shoppers were evacuated from the area.
Yahoo
4 days ago
- Yahoo
Record heat in China strains power grid, stirs health fears
BEIJING (Reuters) -China warned on Wednesday against the risk of power supply disruptions as people struggled to keep cool in record heat baking large swathes of the country, which also spurred warnings to the elderly to guard against heat stroke. Power demand exceeded 1.5 billion kilowatts for the first time last week, energy officials said, the third successive record for China this month, when its first nationwide alert on heat-related health risks also went out. "High-temperature weather will ... have an impact on power generation and supply," weather official Chen Hui told a press conference on Wednesday, adding that it would hit hydropower output and reduce the efficiency of photovoltaic generation. Authorities will send alerts to notify electricity suppliers if measures such as peak shaving and cross-regional dispatching of power are called for, added Chen, an official of the China Meteorological Administration. Over the weekend, China announced that construction had begun on what will be the world's largest hydropower dam in Tibet, at an estimated cost of at least $170 billion, cheering investors but vexing downstream neighbours India and Bangladesh. The project is expected to produce 300 billion kilowatt-hours of electricity annually, equal to the amount of electricity consumed by Britain last year, as Beijing seeks to meet the country's growing power demand. Since mid-March, the number of days when temperatures hit 35 degrees Celsius (95 degrees Fahrenheit) or more is the highest on record, said Jia Xiaolong, deputy director of the National Climate Centre. Authorities asked the elderly to stay indoors unless necessary, while urging outdoor workers to scale down activity on such "sauna days". Temperatures have hit new highs since mid-March in the central provinces of Henan and Hubei, Shandong in the east, Sichuan in the southwest, and northwestern Shaanxi and Xinjiang, pushing the national average to the second highest on record. During the last two weeks, above 40 degrees C (104 F) heat enveloped 407,000 square kilometres of the country, Jia said. That is more than the land area of Germany or Japan. In the same period, roughly one in 10 national weather observatories tracked temperatures above 40C with one in Xinjiang reaching 48.7C. Jia did not rule out the chance of more record-breaking heat, saying August could prove as warm as, or even hotter than, in recent years. Solve the daily Crossword