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Drawback of River Indus

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Indian government sources said there was not even an iota of change in the country’s position in connection with the Miyar project, located in Himachal Pradesh’s Lahaul Spiti district.(HT File Photo)

http://www.hindustantimes.com/india...in-himachal/story-6xoNccvafZpqEieKpppXUM.html

India on Wednesday dismissed reports in Pakistani media that it has agreed to halt work on the Miyar hydroelectric project at the neighbouring country’s request and termed them “factually incorrect”.

“Media reports on India agreeing to halt Miyar project at Pakistan’s request are factually incorrect. India never agreed to halt the project(sic),” the Indian High Commission in Islamabad tweeted on Tuesday night after the meeting of the Permanent Indus Commission in the Pakistani capital.

Rubbishing the reports, government sources said there was “not even an iota of change” in India’s position in connection with the 120 MW-capacity Miyar project, located in Himachal Pradesh’s Lahaul Spiti district.

They said India has also not agreed to review the design of the Lower Kalnai hydropower project (48 MW), being built in Jammu and Kashmir, as reported by the media in Pakistan.

“What has appeared in Pakistani media is distortion. India’s position on the projects remains the same as it was before going to the meeting,” a top official said.

The Indian delegation for the two-day meeting, which concluded on Tuesday, was led by Indus Water Commissioner PK Saxena while the Pakistani delegation was headed by Mirza Asif Saeed Baig.

After the meeting, Pakistan’s ministry of water and power had said in a statement that the discussions were held on India’s proposed Miyar, Lower Kalnai and Pakal Dul hydropower projects as well as on matters pertaining to exchange of data and conducting tours and meetings of the Indus commission.

“On (the) Miyar hydropower project, India has withdrawn its design after Pakistan had made objections on it in the previous meetings of the commission,” the statement claimed.

It said the “Indian side also agreed to a tour of inspection for Pakistan’s Indus Commission which is expected to be arranged before August 2017.”

Besides Miyar and Lower Kalnai, Pakistan has been flagging concerns over designs of India’s Pakal Dul (1000 MW), Ratle (850 MW) and Kishanganga (330 MW) hydropower projects, being built or planned in the Indus river basin, contending these violate the treaty.
 
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http://zeenews.india.com/india/paki...ter-treaty-likely-in-us-in-april-1995040.html

IANS | Last Updated: Tuesday, April 11, 2017 - 15:42

Islamabad: The secretary-level dialogue between Pakistan and India on Indus Water Treaty will be held either by the end of April or beginning of May in Washington, the Pakistani media reported on Tuesday.

Minister for Water and Power Khawaja Asif on March 20 said the talks will be held for developing a consensus in the light of the treaty on the mechanism for resolution of "faulty designs" of 300MW Kishenganga and 850MW Ratle hydropower projects, The News International quoted a senior official as saying.

Asif had said the secretary-level talks would take place in Washington from April 11-13 as proposed by the World Bank.

He said Pakistan was prepared for the talks but India was not ready for the proposed dates.

"And we are hopeful that belated talks will take place by the end of current month (April)," the official said.

The official said the World Bank wanted both countries to develop a consensus either on mechanism of neutral expert or of court of arbitration mentioned in the treaty for the resolution of issues.

A World Bank official would also be part of the meeting and try to persuade both the countries to reach consensus on any mechanisms or find the middle way.

Pakistan wants the World Bank to constitute a court of arbitration to resolve the disputes, but India wants the solution through the mechanism of neutral experts.


First Published: Tuesday, April 11, 2017 - 15:42
 
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http://indianexpress.com/article/india/indus-river-irrigation-projects-in-jk-miss-deadline-4615378/

Three irrigation projects in the Indus river basin in Jammu and Kashmir, which were supposed to be completed by March this year, have missed their deadline, a top government official has said.

These projects are part of the 23 irrigation works the government had prioritised to complete by the end of the previous fiscal under two central schemes.

While the remaining ones are nearing completion, sources said the Tral irrigation project in Pulwama, Prakachik Khows canal project in Kargil, and the modernisation of Ravi Canal in Jammu have failed to meet the deadline.

According to the official, the Tral project got delayed after the Jammu and Kashmir government decided to review it. The official, however, did not elaborate on why the review was being done.

“The work on Prakachik Khows canal also could not progress as expected due to hostile weather conditions. The area is still snow-bound. Same is the case with Ravi canal,” the official added.

The modernisation of the main Ravi canal is expected to be completed by December this year. The other two projects are likely to be completed by next year, the official said.

Last year, the government had decided to fast-track four projects, including these three, under the Pradhan Mantri Krishi Sinchayi Yojana (PMKYS) and Accelerated Irrigation Benefits Programme (AIBP), aiming to increase irrigated land in the state by nearly 2.05 lakh acres.

The three projects will help cover 1.45 lakh acres of the total area planned to be irrigated.

The fourth project, Rajpora Lift Irrigation, to be completed by 2019, is expected to help irrigate around 59,305 acres of land.

All these works are expected to cost Rs 117 crore, for which money will be raised by National Bank for Agriculture and Rural Development (NABARD).

India can irrigate up to 13 lakh acres of land in Jammu and Kashmir. Until now, only seven lakh acres of land have been irrigated.

The government’s move to expedite work on the projects came at the same time as its decision to review the Indus Waters Treaty (IWT), a pact between India and Pakistan on sharing the waters of six rivers in the basin, last year.

The official, though, maintained that fast-tracking irrigation projects has “nothing to do” with the decision to review the treaty.

The Union Government had launched the PMKYS in 2015 to enhance physical access to water on farm and expand cultivable area under assured irrigation, improve on-farm water use efficiency and introduce sustainable water conservation practices through major and minor irrigation projects.

The AIBP was launched in 1996-97 to provide central assistance to major/minor irrigation projects in the country to accelerate implementation of such programmes. Since its inception, 143 projects have been completed under AIBP.
 
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http://www.thehindu.com/society/Blue-skies-and-butter-tea/article17283316.ece?homepage=true

Leh’s Lamayuru monastery

‘By courtesy of Deptt. Of Tourism Leh’, oil-painted and shining, was an endearing blend of faith, myth, history and annual festival announcement. It said the valley had been under water and votive water offerings to serpent spirits caused the water to drain. It said a swastika grew, after which the monastery was built. And of the place being declared a sanctuary in the 16th century, it went on to talk about a well-preserved statue of Vairocana and concludes with English explorer William Moorcroft’s discovery of letters from Aurangzeb’s court, exempting the monastery from taxes, and its inhabitants from forced labour.

The day stretched blue and bright, the quality of light and air pure, and a raptor hovered lazily in the air currents far above. There was nothing to show how it had been sacked in 1834 in a raid by Zorawar Singh. The monks had fled, and only a few survived and returned to find their home in ruins and their friends murdered.




http://www.thehindu.com/life-and-style/travel/tibetan-monk-who-built-monasteries/article18153322.ece
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Alchi monastery with the willow tree | Photo Credit: J.Ramanan

Lotsawa Rinchen Zangpo is known as the father of culture in Ladakh
With the cold winds whistling through the Trans-Himalayan desert, and temperatures plummeting to minus fifty degrees, the painters, sculptors, skilled artisans and artists from Chamba, Kullu, Kinnaur and Kashmir worked with a religious zeal under the guidance of the great Lotsawa Rinchen Zangpo (958-1055A.D.), the chief priest and the Vajracharya of Tholing of the Guge Kingdom in Tibet.

They toiled day and night, adding a celestial dimension to the simple mud and stone monastic structures. They covered the walls with paintings depicting divine stories from the Buddha’s life, drew mystic mandalas and created heroic size stuccos of the Buddhist deities. And they built these magnificent monuments subjecting themselves to the harsh weather conditions, atop rocky cliffs and craggy faces of high mountains, where there were no roads and the building material was limited to mud and poplar wood. These ethereal mud edifices served as epicentres of the local art and culture of the religion and philosophy of the Vajrayana sect of Buddhism contributing greatly to the ancient and rich cultural relics of our country.

Ratna Badra, a young scholar, went to Vikramshila in Kashmir to study Sanskrit. On his return, he contributed immensely to the preservation of the Sanskrit Buddhist Sutras by translating them into Bhoti, the language of the Tibetans. Thus, he earned the title Lotsawa (translator) and came to be recognised as Lotsawa Rinchen Zangpo, who spread Buddhism in these parts and was the father of culture in Ladakh. He was a disciple of the famous Indian Master Atishaa.

Rare manuscripts

Rinchen Zangpo is believed to have constructed 108 gompas, most popular among them being the Tabo monastery known as the Ajantha of the Himalaya in Spiti, where rare manuscripts, thankas, frescos and murals are well preserved. The others include the Lalung; the Alchi, located in Khalsi on the banks of the river Indus, Lamayuru Monastery, the Wanla, the Mangyu and the Sumda. Legend goes that while undertaking the divine task of building these monasteries overnight, Rinchen Zangpo carried withered willow sticks with him to different sites in Ladakh, Zangskar, Spiti, Kinnaur, Bhutan and Arunachal Pradesh. Here, he planted them and wherever the sticks sprang to life and turned green, a monastery was constructed.

A thousand winters have flown by since this great master attained Buddhahood, but, the sacred texts, art and culture of the Mahayana Sect of Buddhism, are found even today only in these monasteries that are in India. The other noteworthy Buddhist temples built by him in Tibet faced destruction in the hands of the invading Red army in the 1950s.

In 1983, the Dalai Lama performed the Kala Chakra ceremony for world peace at the Tabo Monastery.

The monasteries of Tabo and Alchi are recognised by UNESCO as World Heritage Sites.

The writers are ace photographers known for their travelogues

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Leh’s Lamayuru monastery , There was nothing to show how it had been sacked in 1834 in a raid by Zorawar Singh.
 
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http://zeenews.india.com/world/chin...velop-indus-river-cascade-report-2004739.html

Islamabad: Pakistan and China are expected to sign an MoU for developing the North Indus River Cascade with investment of USD 50 billion to generate up to 40,000 MW hydro electricity.

The memorandum of understanding is likely to be signed in Beijing today during the visit of Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif to China, according to The Express Tribune newspaper.

"The USD 50 billion investment comes on top of the USD 46 billion investment being provided by the Chinese government and Chinese banks for financing power and road infrastructure projects in Pakistan under the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC)," the paper reported.


With the signing of the MoU ? which will be witnessed by Prime Minister Sharif ? Beijing will emerge as the biggest financier of infrastructure projects in Pakistan.

According to the studies conducted by the Water and Power Development Authority (Wapda), Pakistan has an identified potential of producing up to 60,000MW of hydroelectric power.

Some 40,000MW of this potential power is located in the region called the Indus River Cascade, which begins from Skardu in Gilgit-Baltistan and runs through Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa as far as Tarbela, the site of Pakistan?s biggest dam.

The Indus River Cascade includes Diamer-Bhasha Dam project for which Pakistan needs USD 15 billion financing.

Other multilateral donors were not willing to invest on this project but now China has come up to finance this mega project.

Sources said the Chinese side conducted survey and studies on the North Indus Cascade including the sites of Pattan, Thacoat, Bunji, Dasau and Diamer in February 2017.

The Chinese side in their last high-level meeting agreed to convert the survey and initial study to an MoU whereby the Chinese will conduct a detailed study spanning over a period of three months on a developing roadmap for financing that will lead to initiation and completion of these mega projects.

Sources said this will be Pakistan's first-ever private sector investment in mega projects in hydel resources as until now only Wapda led such projects.

The most important development could be the Chinese undertaking of these projects as it has a vast experience for building such huge dams.

According to the sources, the CPEC and the North Indus River Cascade can be the biggest-ever Chinese investment in Pakistan.

In 2015, the owner of the world's largest hydroelectric dam, China Three Gorges (CTG) Corporation, had expressed willingness to participate in a financing consortium to fund up to USD 50 billion of hydroelectric power projects in Pakistan.

The Chinese government-owned CTG expressed an interest in financing projects in Pakistan in conjunction with the International Finance Corporation, a World Bank subsidiary.

The CTG owns and operates the Three Gorges Dam, the world's largest hydroelectric power plant with a capacity of 22,500MW, nearly matching in one power plant the entire installed capacity of the Pakistani grid of 23,500MW.

The mega undertaking may create further tension between Pakistan and India as the investment would be made in Gilgit- Baltistan region which is part of Azad Kashmir.
 
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The Minister of State for Development of North Eastern Region (I/C), Prime Minister’s Office, Personnel, Public Grievances & Pensions, Atomic Energy and Space, Dr. Jitendra Singh delivering a lecture at the Conference, organised by the Global Counter Terrorism Council, in New Delhi on June 16, 2017.
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Kaza (Himachal Pradesh), August 12, 2017 21:14 IST
Updated: August 13, 2017 09:17 IST
http://www.thehindu.com/news/nation...ssils-to-souvenir-hunters/article19482098.ece

Fossils dating back a couple of hundred million years ago in remote villages of Lahaul and Spiti valley of Himachal Pradesh are being mined and sold as cheap tourist souvenirs, destroying key links in the ancient geological history of the Indian subcontinent.

These fossils can be bought for as low as Rs. 50 from local shops and eateries where they are displayed. Of several shapes and sizes, the common fossils on sale are coral reef of the Triassic period, between 250 million and 199 million years old, and ammonoids of Triassic-Jurassic period, between 199 million and 145 million years ago.

The geological remnants, described as part of a marine sequence, can be found in the hills near Lalung, Mud, Komic, Hikkim and Langza villages in the Lahaul and Spiti district in Spiti valley about 200 km from Shimla.

What is more, two of the three places where giant scorpion trace fossils along with trilobite traces were found in Parahio valley have been destroyed during construction of a road to Pin valley. The giant scorpion traces are unique and found only in Antarctica, Australia and Spiti Valley.

During construction of a canal, Middle Norian Coral reef in Ratangnala, a tributary of Spiti river was mined to provide building materials. The excavated earth has covered what is left of the reef.

Another geologically significant feature belonging to the era when continents first stabilised, a Paleoproterozoic paleosol in the Sutlej valley, was exposed during the construction of Hindustan-Tibet Road in Himachal Pradesh. Walls have been constructed on either side and nothing can be observed now.

Rising tourism has contributed to the erosion in Spiti valley, which paleontologists say is the “museum of Indian Geology”. Many tourists are aware of the availability of fossils here and offer to buy them in large numbers, spurring locals, including children, to identify and pick fossils at various sites. The fossils have hit the internet, with the Spiti valley souvenirs featuring on travel sites and blogs, and some tour operators offering to take customers directly to the sites to acquire fossils between May and October.

“Fossils have been in high demand, especially in the last two years as the number of tourists has increased. Everyone coming to Kaza is aware of fossils on sale. We try to create awareness, but often fail,” says Tanya Roy, who runs Wanderer’s Nest, a homestay at Kaza. She is the founder of Earthroute, which works to protect indigenous culture and promotes sustainability.

“There are no signboards to warn visitors not to take the fossils. The landscape is so vast that surveillance is a problem. Local people are not aware of the treasures,” she said.

Former director of the Geological Survey of India, O.N. Bhargava, said: “Loss of fossils due to indiscrimate sale to tourists has been a serious problem. I have been cautioning the Himachal Pradesh government to prevent it, as it will seriously affect research.” While a lot of the fossils are documented, they are registered in the national repository at Kolkata or in the museums of various universities for further studies.

“The fossils help in building the ancient geography of the globe. They are meant for studies and not to be kept as souvenirs,” he said. “When we go to collect fossils now, we often do not find any due to reckless mining,” he lamented, adding that in five decades of work in the region, he found fossils disappearing.

An honorary professor at the Department of Geology in Panjab University, Chandigarh, Dr. Bhargava has taken up research in this part of the Himalayan region, which was once a part of the Southern Tethys Sea. Fossils help build an index of global time and correlate them using plate formations here with those elsewhere in the world. Plates are formations that glide over the earth's mantle.

“Scientists are interested in understanding the isolation of the Indian plate, its collision with the Eurasian plate and evolution, between 542 million years and 50 millions years ago. This area provides the entire geological history of India.”

The Spiti valley contains almost a continous succession ranging from the Cambrian (between 542 million and 488 million years old) to the Cretaceous (between 145 million and 65 million year old), making it a popular destination for palaeontologists.

It was first reported by Gerard in 1827 to the Royal Asiatic Society, London. Subsequently, many visited this fascinating area, including F. Stoliczka in 1865 and H.H. Hayden in 1904.

Triassic fauna in the Spiti valley has a parallel in the Alps, in Oman and Timor. “In other countries there are strict protocols for conservation. They are aware of their fossil wealth and vandalism is reported. If a fossil is rare no one is allowed to take it and if they are in abundance, they are allowed for studies,” Dr. Bhargava said. Some foreign paleontolgists also did not return samples, he pointed out.

There is an urgent need to formulate laws to preserve unique geological monuments, he said, with the GSI as custodian of all geological features, just as the Archaeological Survey of India oversees archaeological sites.
 
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Pithoragarh, August 30, 2017 07:41 IST
Updated: August 30, 2017 07:41 IST
http://www.thehindu.com/news/nation...-disasters-in-uttarakhand/article19585441.ece

Recent landslips left 9 persons dead
The Geological Survey of India (GSI) has begun a study of the pattern of natural disasters in regions located upwards of Dharchula and Munsiyari sub-divisions of the district which fall in seismic zone V.

Landslips triggered by two cloudbursts in the region recently left nine persons dead. A two-member GSI team has reached disaster-hit Malpa, Mangti and Madarma in Baram Valley to study reasons and patterns of landslips, and contribution of minor earthquakes towards natural disasters in the region, said District Disaster Management Officer R.S. Rana. The team will study the geological situation of the earth in these areas, that are hit by natural disasters almost every year during monsoon since 1977, he said. Copies of the study will be given to the district administration so that the suggestions can be applied to minimise disasters.
 
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Press Trust of India, Washington, Sep 15 2017, 12:11 IST
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The meetings between India and Pakistan on the technical issues of the Indus Waters Treaty (IWT) are taking place in Washington on September 14-15, the spokesperson added. Reuters file photo

http://www.deccanherald.com/content/633256/india-pak-hold-talks-indus.html


India and Pakistan are holding high-level talks on technical issues of the Indus Waters Treaty here, a senior World Bank official has said. "These meetings are a continuation of a discussion on how to safeguard the Treaty for the benefit of the people in both countries," a World Bank spokesperson told PTI.

The meetings between India and Pakistan on the technical issues of the Indus Waters Treaty (IWT) are taking place in Washington on September 14-15, the spokesperson added.

The World Bank in August had said that under the IWT, India is permitted to construct hydroelectric power facilities on tributaries of the Jhelum and Chenab rivers with certain restrictions.

Pakistan opposes the construction of the Kishanganga (330 megawatts) and Ratle (850 megawatts) hydroelectric power plants being built by India, it had said in a fact sheet issued at the conclusion of secretary-level talks between the two countries over the IWT.

The IWT was signed in 1960 after nine years of negotiations between India and Pakistan with the help of the World Bank, which is also a signatory.

The World Bank's role in relation to "differences" and "disputes" is limited to the designation of people to fulfil certain roles when requested by either or both of the parties, the fact sheet said.
 
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Seen here is the confluence of the Indus river (L) and the Zanskar river (R) at Sangam near Leh in Ladakh, India. Ladakh, nestled between the Kunlun mountain range in the north and the main Great Himalayas to the south, was once an ancient Buddhist Kingdom and for over half a century now, a strategic military outpost for India. (Daniel Berehulak / Getty Images)


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Indus River and Brahmaputra River are part of uttarkhand glaciers.

No lake formation near Gaumukh or along the course of river Bhagirathi: reports

The analyses of ISRO's satellite data for October 17 showed "minor pondage" near the snout of the Gangotri glacier, but "no blockage" was observed.

http://indianexpress.com/article/in...e-course-of-river-bhagirathi-reports-4983009/


Written by Kavita Upadhyay | Dehradun | Updated: December 14, 2017 7:47 pm
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In July 2017 a landslide had occurred due to which debris had been deposited near Gaumukh. (Source: Express archives)

A day after the Uttarakhand high court ordered the state government to clear the lake that had formed near Gaumukh – the snout of the Gangotri glacier from where the Bhagirathi river originates – a team of scientists and government officials who did an aerial survey of the Gangotri glacier dismissed claims of any lake formation at Gaumukh which could hinder the course of the Bhagirathi river.

When the satellite data available with the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) from November 2011 to October 2017 was analysed by the expert agencies, it was observed that in July 2017 a landslide had occurred due to which debris had been deposited “slightly away” from Gaumukh.

The analyses of ISRO’s satellite data for October 17, a copy of which is with The Indian Express, showed “minor pondage” near the snout of the Gangotri glacier, but “no blockage” was observed in the Bhagirathi river.

A team of scientists who had visited the Gangotri glacier in October had also mentioned the formation of an artificial lake near Gaumukh.

Vikram Gupta, a scientist at the Dehradun-based Wadia Institute of Himalayan Geology (WIHG) who was a part of the team that did the aerial survey on Thursday said, “While the course of the Bhagirathi has shifted slightly to the right due to the landslide in July, we didn’t observe any obstruction in the path of the river.”

Piyoosh Rautela, Executive Director of Diaster Mitigation and Management Centre (DMMC), who was also a part of the three-member team said, “Debris had accumulated near the Gangotri snout after the July landslide, but it might have been washed off during rainfall since we didn’t witness much debris near Gaumukh.”

On December 12, a team was sent towards Gangotri glacier to see whether there was any blockade of the river due to lake formation near Gaumukh but because of heavy snowfall the team could not reach the Gangotri glacier, which is why an aerial survey was conducted on Thursday, Rautela said.

The report of the aerial survey states that there was “no imminent danger from the landslide that had occurred during the rainy season of 2017 near the snout of the Gangotri glacier and at present there exists no lake along the course of the river”.

On Wednesday, while hearing a PIL by Delhi-based Ajay Gautam the high court had instructed the state government to clear the lake near Gaumukh to prevent any future disasters like the one at Kedarnath in June 2013 where at least 4,000 people had died due to floods from a glacial lake breach.
 
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Photos: India and Pakistan’s water rivalry in Himalayan Kashmir
Dec 18, 2017 11:49 IST

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A general view of the Neelum-Jhelum Hydropower Project in Nosari, Pakistan-administered Kashmir’s Neelum Valley. Several hundred metres underground, thousands of labourers grind away day and night on a mammoth hydroelectric project in contested Kashmir, where India and Pakistan are racing to tap the subcontinent’s diminishing freshwater supplies. (Sajjad Qayyum / AFP)
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More than 6,000 Pakistani and Chinese workers busy themselves in the 28 kilometres of underground tunnels or in the power station itself, buried under 400 metres of rock in the heart of the Himalayas. The arch rivals, India and Pakistan have been building duelling power plants along the banks of the turquoise Neelum River for years. (Sajjad Qayyum / AFP)
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Labourers work on a power distribution point of the hydropower project in Chattar Klass on the outskirts of Muzaffarabad, the capital of Pakistan-administered Kashmir. The two projects, located on opposite sides of the Line of Control (LoC) are now close to completion, fuelling tensions with Pakistan particularly worried their downstream project will be deprived of much-needed water by India. (Sajjad Qayyum / AFP)
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Pakistani and Chinese workers walk into the site of the project in Nosari. As a tributary of the Jhelum River, the Neelum theoretically falls into Pakistan’s sphere, which launched the Neelum-Jhelum power plant project a quarter of a century ago to counter the legal, but competing Kishanganga project in Indian Kashmir. (Sajjad Qayyum / AFP)
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Chinese engineer works on the Neelum-Jhelum Hydropower Project. The rivalry on the Neelum is underlined by both countries’ unquenchable need for freshwater, as their surging populations and developing economies continue to stress already diminished waters tables. This situation represents a serious challenge to Pakistan’s food security and long-term growth. (Sajjad Qayyum / AFP)
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Chinese and Pakistani engineers at the entrance of the power station. The Indus River --into which the waters of the Neelum ultimately flow-- is one of the longest on the continent, cutting through ultra-sensitive borders in the region. It rises in Tibet, crosses Kashmir and waters 65% of Pakistan’s territory before flowing into the Indian Ocean. (Sajjad Qayyum / AFP)
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Chinese engineers work on a power distribution point in Chattar Klass. At the confluence of the Neelum and Jhelum, the gigantic underground cathedral of concrete and steel is near completion -- the four generators are in place, waiting for the transformers and the network to be connected. (Sajjad Qayyum / AFP)
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Labourers are engaged day and night for the project’s completion. Once finished, the dam is expected to churn out 969 MW of electricity by mid-2018. On the Indian side, the Kishanganga power station is also in its final phase, but has delayed its late 2017 completion date, according to an official, in part because of ongoing unrest in the Kashmir valley. (Sajjad Qayyum / AFP)
 
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http://www.tribuneindia.com/news/ut...-sent-to-assess-glacier-situation/514977.html

Tribune News Service
Dehradun, December 17


State Disaster Relief Force has sent another team to assess the ground situation prevailing around the Gangotri glacier, where massive landslides had occurred. The members comprising mostly of mountaineers are likely to take an intensive recce of the area.

This is the second team dispatched by SDRF, after the first team failed to make it to the Glacier due to heavy snowfall. Already a team comprising scientists from Wadia Institute and officials from the State Disaster Management Authority have already undertaken an aerial survey. The team members have so far discounted the possible formation of lake at the snout of the Gangotri glacier, due to the occurrence of landslides.
 
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Ministry of Water Resources
08-March, 2018 15:05 IST
Inter-Linking of Rivers

The National Perspective Plan (NPP) was prepared by the then Ministry of Irrigation in August 1980 for transferring water from water surplus basins to water-deficit basins. Under the NPP, the National Water Development Agency (NWDA) identified 30 links (16 under Peninsular Component & 14 under Himalayan Component) for preparation of Feasibility Reports (FRs). The Pre-Feasibility Reports (PFRs) of all 30 links have been prepared and circulated to the concerned State Governments. After survey and investigations, FRs of 14 links under Peninsular Component and FRs of 2 links and draft FRs of 7 links (Indian portion) under Himalayan Component have been completed. Present status, States concerned, and benefits are given in Annexure. The Inter-Linking of River (ILR) programme has been taken up on high priority.

Four priority links under Peninsular Rivers Component have been identified for preparation of Detailed Project Report (DPR) viz; Ken-Betwa link project (KBLP) Phase –I & II, Damanganga-Pinjal link project, Par-Tapi-Narmada link project and Mahanadi Godavari link project. The preparation of DPR of a project is taken up after consent of concerned State Governments. DPRs of KBLP Phase-I & Phase-II, Damanganga-Pinjal link project and Par-Tapi-Narmada link project have been completed. The techno-economic clearance and various statutory clearances of the KBLP Phase-I have been accorded. Based on the request of Government of M.P., the DPRs of projects included under KBLP Phase-II viz., Lower Orr dam, Bina complex projects and Kotha barrage have been completed by NWDA/ Government of M.P. and submitted for techno-economical appraisal in Central Water Commission (CWC).



The techno-economic clearance of the Damanganga-Pinjal link project has been accorded subject to statutory clearances. The DPR of Par-Tapi-Narmada link project has been submitted for technical appraisal in CWC. The DPR of the Mahanadi – Godavari link could not be taken up as the Government of Odisha was not agreeable for Mahanadi – Godavari link, a mother link of 9 link system viz., Mahanadi – Godavari – Krishna – Pennar – Palar – Cauvery – Vaigai – Gundar linkage due to large submergence involved in Manibhadra Dam. Based on the suggestions of Govt. of Odisha, NWDA has prepared a preliminary revised proposal of Mahanadi- Godavari Link Project with reduced submergence and submitted to the Govt. of Odisha.



The estimated cost of these four projects for which DPRs have been completed is furnished below:

Sl. No
Name of the Project
Estimated Cost (Rs. in crore)at 2015-16 price level


1.
Ken-Betwa Link Project(Phase-I)
18057

2.
Ken-Betwa Link Project(Phase-II)
8594

3.
Damanganga-Pinjal Link Project
3008

4.
Par-Tapi-Narmada Link Project
10211



At the time of preparation of DPR of the individual river link projects, detailed Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) studies as per Terms of Reference approved by Environmental Appraisal Committee (EAC) of Ministry of Environment and Forests & Climate Change are carried out. EIA study includes impacts on land environment, water resources and its quality, terrestrial ecology (flora, fauna, vegetation cover, wildlife), aquatic ecology (riverine ecology, fisheries), pollution due to noise during construction phase, impact on air quality, impact due to command area development, impacts on local services (like water supply, education, health care, community forests, impacts on business opportunities). All environmental impacts and issues arising out of the EIA studies are duly addressed in Environmental Management Plan which forms a part of DPR.

The impacts of individual ILR project on the human lives, environment, landmass, etc., are suitably addressed in the Environment Impact and Socio-economic impact Assessment studies which is part of the preparation of DPR.


ANNEXURE



Present status of Inter Basin Water Transfer Links, the States involved, name of rivers, proposed benefits and status of Feasibility Reports/Detailed Project Report



Sl. No
Name
States concerned
States benefited
Annual Irrigation (Lakh ha)
Domestic and Industrial supply (MCM)
Hydropower(MW)
Present status


Peninsular Component


1
Mahanadi (Manibhadra) - Godavari (Dowlaiswaram) link
Odisha, Maharashtra, AP, Karnataka, Chattisgarh& Telangana
Andhra Pradesh& Odisha
0.91+3.52 = 4.43
802
445
FR completed

2
Godavari (Inchampalli) - Krishna (Pulichintala) link
-do-
Telangana and Andhra Pradesh
1.09+5.04=
6.13
413
--
FR completed

3
Godavari (Inchampalli) - Krishna (Nagarjunasagar) link
Odisha, Maharashtra, Madhya Pradesh, AP, Karnataka, Chattisgarh & Telangana
Telangana
2.87
237
975
FR completed

4
Godavari (Polavaram) - Krishna (Vijayawada) link
Odisha, Maharashtra, AP, Karnataka, Chattisgarh&Telangana
Andhra Pradesh
5.82
162
--
FR completed

5
Krishna (Almatti) – Pennar link
Maharashtra, Karnataka, Telangana&AP
Andhra Pradesh& Karnataka
1.90+0.68 = 2.58
56
--
FR completed

6
Krishna (Srisailam) – Pennar link
-do-
--
--
--
17
FR completed

7
Krishna (Nagarjunasagar) - Pennar (Somasila ) link
Maharashtra, AP& Karnataka
Andhra Pradesh
5.81
124
90
FR completed

8
Pennar (Somasila) - Cauvery (Grand Anicut) link
AP, Karnataka, Tamil Nadu, Kerala & Puducherry
AP, Tamil Nadu & Puducherry
0.49+4.36 + 0.06 = 4.91
1105
--
FR completed


Sl. No
Name
States concerned
States benefited
Annual Irrigation (Lakh ha)
Domestic and Industrial supply (MCM)
Hydropower(MW)
Present status


9
Cauvery (Kattalai) - Vaigai -Gundar link
Karnataka, Tamil Nadu, Kerala & Puducherry
Tamil Nadu
3.38
185
--
FR completed



10
Ken-Betwa link
a) Ken-Betwa Link Phase-I

b) Ken-Betwa link Phase-II

Uttar Pradesh & Madhya Pradesh
- do-

Uttar Pradesh &Madhya Pradesh
Madhya Pradesh

2.66 + 3.69 =6.35
0.99

49
6

78
-

FR&DPR
(Ph-I&II) completed


11
Parbati -Kalisindh- - Chambal link
Madhya Pradesh, Rajasthan & Uttar Pradesh (UP requested to be consulted during consensus building )
Madhya Pradesh& Rajasthan
*Alt.I: 2.05+ 0.25 =2.30 (Alt.II: 1.77+ 0.43 = 2.20)
13.2
--
FR completed

12
Par-Tapi-Narmada link
Maharashtra & Gujarat
Gujarat& Maharashtra
2.32
76
22
FR&DPR completed

13
Damanganga- Pinjal link
(As per DPR )
-do-
Maharashtra (only water supply to Mumbai)
--
895(including 316 MCM from Pinjal dam proposed by GoM)
--
FR&DPR completed

14
Bedti- Varda link
Maharashtra, Andhra Pradesh & Karnataka
Karnataka
0.60
--
4
PFR completed

15
Netravati– Hemavati link
Karnataka, Tamil Nadu & Kerala
Karnataka
0.34
--
--
PFR completed.

16
Pamba- Achankovil- Vaippar link
Kerala & Tamil Nadu,
Kerala& Tamil Nadu
0.91
--
508
FR completed

Himalayan Component

Sl. No
Name
States concerned
States benefited
Annual Irrigation (Lakh ha)
Domestic and Industrial supply (MCM)
Hydropower(MW)


Present status

1.
Manas-Sankosh-Tista-Ganga (M-S-T-G) link
Assam, West Bengal, Bihar& Bhutan
Assam, West Bengal & Bihar
2.08 + 1.82 + 2.64 = 6.54
--
5287
PFR completed

2.
Kosi-Ghaghra link
Bihar , Uttar Pradesh &Nepal
Bihar& Uttar Pradesh
8.17+ 0.67 + 1.74 (Nepal) = 10.58
48
--
PFR completed


3.
Gandak-Ganga link
-do-
Uttar Pradesh
37.99+2.41 (Nepal) = 40.40
700
--
Draft FR completed (Indian portion)

4.
Ghaghra-Yamuna link
-do-
Uttar Pradesh
25.30 + 1.35 (Nepal) =26.65
1391
10884
FR completed (Indian portion)

5.
Sarda-Yamuna link
Bihar, UP, Haryana, Rajasthan, Uttarakhand & Nepal
Uttar Pradesh & Uttarakhand
3.45 + 0.30 = 3.75
6250
3600
FR completed (Indian portion)

6.
Yamuna-Rajasthan link
UP, Gujarat, Haryana & Rajasthan
Haryana & Rajasthan
0.435 + 2.442 = 2.877
57
--
Draft FR completed

7.
Rajasthan-Sabarmati link
-do-
Rajasthan & Gujarat
5.35 + 2.04= 7.39
282
--
Draft FR completed

8.
Chunar-Sone Barrage link
Bihar& UP
Bihar& Uttar Pradesh
0.30 + 0.37= 0.67
--
--
Draft FR completed

9.
Sone Dam – Southern Tributaries of Ganga link
Bihar & Jharkhand
Bihar & Jharkhand
2.99 + 0.08=3.07
360
95
PFR completed

10.
Ganga(Farakka)-Damodar-Subernarekha link
West Bengal, Odisha & Jharkhand
West Bengal, Odisha & Jharkhand
7.63 + 0.30 + 0.55 = 8.47
484
-
Draft FR completed

11.
Subernarekha-Mahanadi link
West Bengal& Odisha
West Bengal& Odisha
0.18 + 0.365 = 0.545
--
9
Draft FR completed

12.
Kosi-Mechi link
Bihar, West Bengal & Nepal
Bihar
2.99 + 1.75 (Nepal) = 4.74
24
3180
PFR completed(Entirely lies in Nepal)



13.
Farakka-Sunderbans link
West Bengal
West Bengal
1.50
184
--
Draft FR completed

14.
Jogighopa-Tista-Farakka link (Alternative to M-S-T-G)
-do-
Assam, West Bengal &Bihar
----
216
1115
Alternate to M-S-T-G link dropped.



· PFR- Pre Feasibility Report
· FR- Feasibility Report
· DPR- Detailed Project Report



This information was given by Union Minister of State for Water Resources, River Development and Ganga Rejuvenation Shri Arjun Ram Meghwal in a written reply in Lok Sabha today.

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Ministry of Water Resources
15-March, 2018 15:45 IST
Sharing of River Waters

A Regional Conference on Water Resources of Southern States viz Andhra Pradesh, Telangana, Karnataka, Kerala, Tamil Nadu and UT of Puducherry was organised on 20.02.2018 at Hyderabad under the chairmanship of Shri Arjun Ram Meghwal, Minister of State for Water Resources, River Development & Ganga Rejuvenation (WR, RD & GR). The Ministers of Telangana, Kerala and Puducherry and their officers along with officers of Karnataka, Telangana and Andhra Pradesh and officers of MoWR, RD & GR, CWC, Central Ground Water Board and National Water Development Agency (NWDA) participated in the conference. These States have raised their outstanding water resources and other issues of inter-State nature and the same were discussed during the conference.


Alternative studies on Mahanadi-Godavari link project to divert surplus water of Godavari river to Cauvery river through Godavari (Akinepalli)-Cauvery (Grand Anicut) link project was discussed in the conference. The proposal consists of construction of a barrage across Godavari river at Akinepalli in Telangana. The surplus Godavari waters available at proposed Akinepalli barrage is envisaged to be lifted by a height of 132m in 3 stages for transfer to existing Nagarjunasagar reservoir across Krishna. The length of the link between Akinepalli and Nagarjunasagar is 341 km. From Nagarjunasagar, the length of the proposed link canal is 393 km upto Somasila reservoir across Pennar. From Somasila to Palar and Cauvery, the length of the canal is 529 km.


Mahanadi-Godavari-Krishna-Pennar-Cauvery-Vaigai-Gundar linking scheme has been identified as the “nine link system” which will benefit the Southern States. NWDA prepared the Feasibility Report of these link proposals in the year 2004/2005 and circulated to the concerned States. Mahanadi-Godavari is the mother link of this system. For taking up the Detailed Project Report of Mahanadi-Godavari link, the consensus building with concerned states is necessary.


It was decided in the conference that basin wise approach would be adopted to resolve issues among the basin states by convening Basin-wise meetings. It was also decided that the Regional Conference will be organized in other regions of the country to address outstanding water resources issues including inter-State issues.


Further, in order to streamline the existing process of adjudication of inter-state river water disputes by way of amending the Inter State River Water Disputes Act, 1956, the Inter State River Water Disputes (Amendment) Bill, 2017 was introduced in Lok Sabha on 14.03.2017. The Bill envisages to constitute a standalone Tribunal with permanent establishment and permanent office space and infrastructure so as to obviate with the need to set up a separate Tribunal for each water dispute which is invariably a time-consuming process. The proposed amendments in the Bill will speed up the adjudication of water disputes referred to it. The Bill was referred to Parliamentary Standing Committee on Water Resources for examination. The Standing Committee submitted its recommendation on the Bill vide Lok Sabha Secretariat letter dated 11.08.2017 in the form of ‘Nineteenth Report of Standing Committee on Water Resources on The Inter-State River Water Disputes (Amendment) Bill, 2017’. Accordingly, the Ministry has prepared draft Cabinet Note for amendments to Inter-State River Water Disputes Act 1956.


The Minister of Water Resources, River Development & Ganga Rejuvenation, Road Transport & Highways and Shipping, Shri Nitin Gadkari gave this information in reply to a question in Lok Sabha today.

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