Millennium Post

National Rural Drinking Water Programme failed to achieve target: CAG

- OUR CORRESPOND­ENT

NEW DELHI: The National Rural Drinking Water Programme has failed to achieve its target of supplying safe drinking water to all rural habitation­s by 2017, according to a report by the Comptrolle­r and Auditor General (CAG) tabled in Parliament on Tuesday.

The report said that though the programme envisaged that at least 50 per cent of the rural population will be provided piped water by 2017, the implementa­tion was marked by lack of proper planning and poor funds management, leading to undue delays in completion of various schemes and cost overrun.

“The programme failed to achieve the targets that were set for achievemen­t by 2017 to supply safe drinking water to all rural habitation­s, government schools and anganwadi. 50 per cent of rural population was to be provided potable drinking water and 35 per cent of rural households to be pro- vided household connection­s.

“As of December 2017, only 44 per cent of rural habitation­s and 85 per cent of government schools and anganwadi could be provided access to safe drinking water, only 18 per cent of rural population provided potable drinking water by piped water supply and only 17 per cent of rural households were provided household connection­s,” the report said.

The CAG report has pointed out that the failures to achieve the target was attributab­le partly to deficienci­es in implementa­tion such as incomplete, abandoned and non-operationa­l works, unproducti­ve expenditur­e on equipment, non-functional sustainabi­lity structures and gaps in contract management that had a total financial implicatio­n of Rs 2,212.44 crore.

The total financial implicatio­n of the audit findings works out to Rs 2,875 crore, which was a very significan­t 15 per cent of the expenditur­e of Rs 19,151 crore, it said.

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