Business Standard

Will clean 70% of Ganga by 2019-end: Gadkari

- SHREYA JAI

As much as 70 per cent of the Ganga river will be clean by 2019-end, says Nitin Gadkari, who is now also in charge of the ministry of river developmen­t and Ganga rejuvenati­on.

Cleaning of the Ganga was a poll plank for the present ruling coalition. However, the schemes are stuck at various levels with state government­s. Its other programme of river linking remains a non-starter.

Some companies (the Vedanta group is one) have been given some areas of the river for maintenanc­e. Rivers that are tributarie­s to the Ganga are also being tackled. “There are 40 tributarie­s of Ganga and we are working to clean these,” Gadkari told Business Standard.

One of these is planned in Delhi. "The work on cleaning the Yamuna’s water is going slow and I am concerned. I have met the (Delhi) chief minister and Lt Governor three times about it," he said.

As for solid waste management along the rivers, he admits to lacunae. “The work will start in cities by the side of the Ganga. Operationa­l maintenanc­e of such projects has been given to the private sector and technology will be used to monitor it.”

Gadkari says close to ~200 billion has been sanctioned for 193 projects on new sewage treatment plant — in Uttarakhan­d, Uttar Pradesh, Bihar, Jharkhand and West Bengal. Of the 193 projects identified in 2014, only 20 are complete. The highest amount sanctioned is to one of the most polluting states, UP, of ~52.4 billion. Followed by Bihar with ~45.5 billion for creating sewage treatment plants. So far, states have spent ~34.6 billion, at ~8.6 billion a year.

“This government will be definitely judged by the work it did for the Ganga. No other government had ever dedicated so much fund and schemes and attention to the Ganga, with an almost impossible target. We know the public will not forgive us if we fail to clean the Ganga, especially after so much gung ho,” said a senior in the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP).

Gadkari, with Uma Bharti, Union minister for drinking water & sanitation, has made visits to polluting towns on the Ganga’s banks, urging the local administra­tion to hasten on cleaning and restoratio­n in their area.

As for interlinki­ng of rivers (ILR), birthed during the previous BJP-led government under Atal Behari Vajpayee, it is yet to see any breakthrou­gh.

The Ken-Betwa ILR in Madhya Pradesh and Uttar Pradesh is “expected to be rolled out in 2018”, said an official. This portion is supposed to give irrigation benefits of around 8.9 million hectares annually. Since the BJP government took charge in 2014, it has tried to expedite the project by facilitati­ng inter-state meetings, environmen­t and forest clearance. However, it is yet to get going on the ground.

From the record, it was decided this March to combine all the Detailed Project Reports (DPRs) into one. A memorandum of associatio­n (MoA) will follow soon for MP & UP, said an official, adding tenders would be hopefully put out after that. No timeline was offered.

 ??  ?? Transport minister Nitin Gadkari
Transport minister Nitin Gadkari

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