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As climate risks grow, India’s Bengaluru is trying to save its vanishing lakes

BENGALURU, India (AP) 鈥 Sunil Kumar rowed his small boat, moving a few feet at a time, while he spread a fishing net across the weeds floating like a green carpet on Doddajala Lake. The ends of the net were then carried ashore and tied to a tractor and an earthmover, which pulled the bundled plants toward laborers ready to drag them out with pitchforks.

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4 min read
As climate risks grow, India's Bengaluru is trying to save its vanishing lakes

Fisherman Sunil Kumar, bottom, spreads a fishing net to help remove the weeds floating on Doddajala Lake on the outskirts of Bengaluru, India, Saturday, Aug. 23, 2025. (AP Photo/Aijaz Rahi)


BENGALURU, India (AP) 鈥 Sunil Kumar rowed his small boat, moving a few feet at a time, while he spread a fishing net across the weeds floating like a green carpet on Doddajala Lake. The ends of the net were then carried ashore and tied to a tractor and an earthmover, which pulled the bundled plants toward laborers ready to drag them out with pitchforks.

Once each netful of weeds was scooped out, they repeated the process. Kumar, a fisherman who grew up nearby, and the others have been working 10 hours a day for two weeks to clean this water as part of a wider effort to restore polluted lakes that are in danger of , India’s fast-growing tech hub.

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