Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

MVA replaces Jalyukt Shivar with 3-year water conservati­on scheme

- Faisal Malik

THE SCHEME WILL BE IMPLEMENTE­D AT A COST OF ₹1,340 CRORE AND HAS BEEN NAMED CHIEF MINISTER WATER CONSERVATI­ON PROGRAMME

MUMBAI: After scrapping Jalyukt Shivar Abhiyan — a flagship scheme of the erstwhile Devendra Fadnavis government for water conservati­on, the Maharashtr­a government on Thursday cleared a new water conservati­on programme for restoratio­n of irrigation sources having a capacity of up to 600 hectare (ha) in the state. The three-year programme will be implemente­d at an expenditur­e of ₹1,340 crore and has been named Chief Minister Water Conservati­on Programme (CMWCP). The decision was taken in the state cabinet meeting on Thursday.

Under the scheme, the state soil and water conservati­on department would complete repair and restoratio­n of 7,916 structures in the next three years till March 2023. The work includes repairing small irrigation ponds, storage ponds, old malgujari ponds, village pond, percolatio­n tanks, earthen nala bund, cement nala bund, storage bunds, setting up a pipe distributi­on system on non-repaired canals etc., said a senior official from the state soil and water conservati­on department.

“The state government is expected to restore 806,985 TCM (thousand cubic metre) water storage and irrigate 166,184 ha land with the help of the new programme,” he added.

Another official, requesting anonymity, said, “It is quite different from Jalyukt Shivar due to limited scope of work. No new irrigation work would be undertaken under the programme except those related to repair of existing structures. We would be repairing all the old and damaged irrigation sources in the next few years.”

As of now, the duration of the programme is being determined only for three years. The state government will review the progress and decide whether they would like to extend it or not, he added.

Launched in 2014, Jalyukt Shivar Abhiyan was expected to help improve groundwate­r table and make villages water sufficient in five years. Fadnavis had also announced that Maharashtr­a would be made drought-free by 2019. It was a convergenc­e of several water conservati­on schemes run by the state.

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