jal jeevan mission – Artifex.News https://artifex.news Stay Connected. Stay Informed. Thu, 27 Mar 2025 12:02:00 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 https://artifex.news/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/cropped-cropped-app-logo-32x32.png jal jeevan mission – Artifex.News https://artifex.news 32 32 Explained | Water: Centre-State powers, river disputes, laws & drinking water supply https://artifex.news/article65895481-ecerand29/ Thu, 27 Mar 2025 12:02:00 +0000 https://artifex.news/article65895481-ecerand29/ Read More “Explained | Water: Centre-State powers, river disputes, laws & drinking water supply” »

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Polavaram irrigation project receives huge inflow of flood water in West Godavari district
| Photo Credit: BY ARRANGEMENT

On September 7, Delhi Chief Minister and Aam Aadmi Party convener Arvind Kejriwal urged Prime Minister Narendra Modi to solve the long-pending Sutlej-Yamuna Link Canal issue between Punjab and Haryana, saying, “It’s the duty of the Centre to ensure water for Punjab and Haryana, not to make them fight”.

In a press conference at Haryana’s Hisar, he accused BJP of dual-speak, adding, “What’s the stand of the Congress and the BJP in Punjab and Haryana? In Punjab, they say we will not let the SYL canal be constructed. In Haryana, they say we will take SYL waters at any cost. These people do dirty politics”.



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Water Tap In A Dry Rajasthan Village And A Dream Come True https://artifex.news/water-tap-in-a-dry-rajasthan-village-and-a-dream-come-true-7163814rand29/ Tue, 03 Dec 2024 13:39:24 +0000 https://artifex.news/water-tap-in-a-dry-rajasthan-village-and-a-dream-come-true-7163814rand29/ Read More “Water Tap In A Dry Rajasthan Village And A Dream Come True” »

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The tap has been set up under the Jal Jeevan Mission programme. (NDTV)

Jaipur:

Easy access to drinking water was a dream for the residents of Sundra village in Rajasthan’s Barmer district till last week, when water gushed out of a tap built in the middle of a desert, after overcoming numerous obstacles, to ensure supply from a river hundreds of kilometres away.

Even though the tap, set up under the Centre’s Jal Jeevan Mission, supplies water to every household for only a couple of hours once a week, villagers claim the facility has put an end to their hardships and alleviated their woes to a large extent.

“We get tap water once a week for two to three hours. We used to use saline water earlier. The only way to get sweet potable water was to store rainwater,” Jetharam, a villager, said.

The people of the village, located 50 kms from the India-Pakistan border, were initially dependent on “beris” or deep wells for water. These wells were, however, destroyed during the 1965 India-Pakistan war, when the area was captured by the Pakistani forces.

The villagers then either turned to tubewells, which provided saline water, or undertook arduous journeys daily to fetch sweet water from deep wells situated 10kms away.

“It was very difficult for us to walk for 10kms to fetch drinking water. Barmer is 150kms away and this is the last village on the border with Pakistan,” Girdhar Singh, another villager, said.

The village is located 50 kms from the India-Pakistan border.

The village is located 50 kms from the India-Pakistan border.

Officials said the tap connection was built after overcoming several obstacles, to bring water from the Sardar Sarovar Dam on the Narmada River in Gujarat. The vast expanse of desert and the shifting sand dunes make it difficult to lay pipelines in the area, the officials added.

Setting a budget of over Rs 500 crores, the Centre has earmarked 250 villages in Jaisalmer and Barmer, along the border with Pakistan, for water supply from the Narmada canal. Under the Jal Jeevan Mission, the government seeks to provide piped water to every household in the country.

“It took us one year to lay the pipelines as the shifting sand dunes in this desert region cause a lot of problems. The work has been undertaken under the Jal Jeevan Mission and 70% of the target has been met. By March 2025, we aim to complete the work…,” Sonaram Beniwal, senior engineer at the Barmer public health engineering department, said.

“It is a great achievement under the Jal Jeevan Mission. The quality of water in this desert area is very poor. It has high fluoride content and is very salty. The water from the Narmada canal is sweet. The setting up of the water has resolved the drinking water problem in this area to a large extent,” he added.

“They have connected all the homes. You can see it for yourself,” another villager Hakam Singh told this reporter.

(With inputs from Raju Mali in Sundra village)



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77% Of Rural Households In India Now Have Tap Water Connections: Government Data https://artifex.news/77-of-rural-households-in-india-now-have-tap-water-connections-government-data-5915389rand29/ Tue, 18 Jun 2024 14:29:25 +0000 https://artifex.news/77-of-rural-households-in-india-now-have-tap-water-connections-government-data-5915389rand29/ Read More “77% Of Rural Households In India Now Have Tap Water Connections: Government Data” »

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11 states and Union Territories have achieved 100% tap water coverage in rural areas. (Representational)

New Delhi:

About 77 per cent or 14.88 crore rural households have been provided with tap water connections till now, according to official data.

There are a total of 19.31 crore rural households in the country, according to official data by the Jal Jeevan Mission.

According to official data, 14,88,16,184 out of a total of 19,31,21,778 rural households have been provided with a tap water connection so far.

Eleven states and Union Territories (UT) have achieved 100 per cent coverage in rural areas, the data showed.

A total of 16 states and UTs have tap water coverage between 75-100 per cent and five states have coverage of 50-75 per cent. Rajasthan and West Bengal have below 50 per cent coverage, according to the data.

Jal Jeevan Mission, launched in 2019, aims to provide safe and adequate drinking water through individual household tap connections by 2024 to all households in rural India.
 

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)



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Budget 2023 | Changes in allocation for key schemes including MGNREGS, PM-Kisan, Ayushman Bharat https://artifex.news/article66458988-ece/ Wed, 01 Feb 2023 15:04:26 +0000 https://artifex.news/article66458988-ece/ Read More “Budget 2023 | Changes in allocation for key schemes including MGNREGS, PM-Kisan, Ayushman Bharat” »

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Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman on Wednesday, February 1, presented the last full budget of the Narendra Modi government before the 2024 general elections. The Minister announced a range of new initiatives, revised income tax slabs and customs duty, and sops for agriculture and energy transition.

The Union Budget 2023-24 document also listed the new allocations for core welfare schemes that drive socio-economic development. Here’s a roundup of how the budgetary allocations for some of the key schemes have changed-

MGNREGS: The government slashed the budget for its flagship rural employment scheme, the Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme (MGNREGS) by nearly 32% compared to the ₹89,400 revised estimate for the scheme in the current year.

Also read | Explained | The funding and demand for MGNREGA

The Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Act (MGNREGA) was passed in 2005 and aimed at enhancing the livelihood security of households in rural areas. Under it, the MGNREGS is a demand-driven scheme that guarantees 100 days of unskilled work per year for every rural household that wants it, covering all districts in the country except those with a 100% urban population.

Food Subsidies: The Centre has allocated a little above ₹2 lakh crore for the food subsidy under the National Food Security Act (NFSA)- this includes funds for the Food Corporation of India, funds for decentralised procurement of grains by State agencies, and other logistical costs. Starting from January 1, 2023, the Centre had decided to provide 5 kg of free foodgrains per month to the 81.35 crore beneficiaries of the NFSA for one year starting from January 2023, rather than charging them a subsidised amount of ₹3 a kg of rice, ₹2 a kg of wheat and ₹1 a kg of coarse cereal as is usually done.

It was announced in December that the government was terminating the Pradhan Mantri Garib Kalyan Anna Yojana (PMGKAY), which had provided an additional 5 kg of free grains every month to NFSA beneficiaries after being launched as an emergency measure in response to the COVID-19 pandemic in April 2020 and received multiple extensions since. In a normal year, without COVID disruptions, the Centre’s food subsidy bill on account of the NFSA amounted to around ₹2 lakh crore, similar to the newly-announced allocation, but the PMGKAY had effectively doubled that sum for the past two years.

Jal Jeevan Mission: The Centre increased its budgetary allocation for the Jal Jeevan Mission (JJM) or the National Rural Drinking Water Mission by about 27% to ₹70,000 crore from the current year’s revised estimates of ₹55,000. The Jal Jeevan Mission aims to provide safe and adequate drinking water through individual household tap connections by 2024 to all households in rural India.

The Jal Shakti Ministry tweeted last week that the government had provided 11 crore rural households with a tap water connection under the JJM scheme. Data from the Ministry’s dashboard suggest that 56% of the targeted 19.3 crore households had been covered.

The scheme has a total financial outlay of about ₹3.60 lakh crore, with the Centre funding 50% of the cost with States and Union Territories, except for Union Territories without a legislature, where it foots the entire bill, and northeastern and Himalayan States and Union Territories with legislatures, where it funds 90% of the bill.

Ayushman Bharat-PMJAY: The budget for the Ayushman Bharat Pradhan Mantri Jan Arogya Yojana (PMJAY) — the national public health insurance fund, saw an increase of about 12% at ₹7,200 crore compared to the ₹6,000 crore revised estimates for the current year.

The Ayushman Bharat PM-JAY is a health insurance scheme launched in 2018, aiming to provide a health cover of Rs. 5 lakh per family per year for secondary and tertiary care hospitalization. It aims to over 10.74 crore poor and vulnerable families (or 50 crore beneficiaries) from the bottom 40% of the Indian population. Union Health Minister Mansukh Mandaviya had said in December 2022, that 4.5 crore people had so far been empanelled under the scheme.

PM-Kisan: The allocation for the Prime Minister’s Kisan Samman Nidhi (PM-KISAN) scheme was the lowest in five years and remained the same as the revised estimates for the current year at ₹60,000 crore. PM-Kisan is a flagship Central scheme launched in 2019 for cash transfers ₹6,000 per year to eligible farmer families in three instalments of ₹2,000 each.

Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman informed while presenting the Union Budget on Wednesday that the government has made cash transfers totalling ₹2.2 lakh crore to around 11 crore farmers under the PM-Kisan scheme.

PM-POSHAN: The government has allocated a budget of ₹11,600 crore to the Pradhan Mantri Poshan Shakti Nirman, or the rebranded version of the mid-day meal scheme for 2023-24. This is down 9.37% from the current year’s revised estimates of ₹12,800.

In 2021, while renaming the mid-day meal scheme to give hot cooked meals to 11.8 crore government school students from Class 1 to 8, the Centre had also decided to extend the scheme to 24 lakh children studying in balvatikas, the pre-primary section of government schools from 2022-23.

National Education Mission: A total of ₹38,965 crore was allocated to the National Education Mission for 2023-24, up 19.44% from the ₹32,612 crore revised estimates for the current year. The Mission is the umbrella scheme integrating major education-related schemes so education can be provided holistically and without segmentation from pre-primary to class 12. It includes the Sarva Shiksha Abhiyan under the Right to Education and schemes for secondary and higher education as well those for teacher training and adult education.

PMAY: The Centre allocated ₹79,590 crore to the Pradhan Mantri Awas Yojana (PMAY), up 3.19% from the current year’s revised estimates and 66% from the budget estimates. The PMAY aims at constructing houses in both urban and rural areas. PMAY-Gramin (rural) was initiated in November 2016 with a target of completing 2.7 crore houses and PMAY-Urban was initiated in June 2015 with a target of constructing 1.2 crore homes.

National Social Assistance Program: The budget allotted ₹9,636 to the National Social Assistance Program (NSAP), which provides monthly pension assistance to the elderly, widows, and persons with disabilities.

Development of Scheduled Tribes and Scheduled Castes: The budget allocated ₹4,295 crore and ₹9,409 crore to the umbrella programs for the development of Scheduled Tribe and Scheduled Caste communities respectively. While the ST development allocation saw a nearly 10% increase, the SC programme funding rose by close to 22%, compared to the current year’s revised estimates.



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Budget 2023 | Jal Jeevan Mission gets hike in funds https://artifex.news/article66459348-ece/ Wed, 01 Feb 2023 14:54:00 +0000 https://artifex.news/article66459348-ece/ Read More “Budget 2023 | Jal Jeevan Mission gets hike in funds” »

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A fully functional tap water connection is defined as a household getting at least 55 litres of potable water per capita per day all through the year. Image for representation purpose only.
| Photo Credit: G. Moorthy

With an eye on the General Elections and the deadline approaching for the government’s ambitious bid to provide piped water to every rural household by 2024, the Centre’s marquee Jal Jeevan Mission has been allocated ₹69,684 crore, up from the ₹54,808 crore the department is expected to spend in the current financial year. This works out to a roughly 27% hike.

The Swachh Bharat Mission-Rural that aims to “sustain” the open defecation free (ODF) status in India’s villages has been apportioned ₹77,000 crore, up from the ₹60,000 crore the government expects to spend by March 2023.

Last week, the Jal Shakti Ministry tweeted that the government had provided 11 crore rural households with tap water connections. This worked out to about 56% of the targeted 19.3 crore households. In September 2022, 53% of the households, or 10.2 crore households, had been covered.

In October 2022, a Ministry-commissioned survey of a cross-section of rural households reported that Tamil Nadu, Himachal Pradesh, Goa and Puducherry had more than 80% of households with fully functional connections, while less than half the households in Rajasthan, Kerala, Manipur, Tripura, Maharashtra, Madhya Pradesh, Mizoram and Sikkim had such connections.

A fully functional tap water connection is defined as a household getting at least 55 litres of potable water per capita per day all through the year.

Close to three-fourths of households, according to the survey, received water all seven days a week, and 8% just once a week. On average, households received water for three hours every day, and 80% reported that their daily requirements of water were being met by the tap connections.

The Jal Jeevan Mission has a financial outlay of ₹3.60 lakh crore, with the Centre funding 50% of the cost with States and Union Territories, except for Union Territories without a Legislature where it foots the entire bill, and north-eastern and Himalayan States and Union Territories with Legislatures, where it funds 90% of the bill.



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