Context:
The Mekedatu balancing reservoir project proposed by Karnataka on the Cauvery River has once again come into focus following the State’s decision to submit a revised Detailed Project Report (DPR) to the Centre. The project faces strong opposition from Tamil Nadu, raising issues of inter-State river water sharing, environmental impact, and federal governance, despite a Supreme Court ruling in 2018 on Cauvery water allocation.
Key Highlights:
Project Overview
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Proposed by Karnataka near Mekedatu, around 100 km from Bengaluru.
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Estimated cost: ₹9,000 crore.
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Storage capacity: 67.16 TMC of water.
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Power generation potential: 400 MW (hydropower).
Judicial and Institutional Developments
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The Supreme Court termed Tamil Nadu’s challenge to the project as “premature”.
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This opens the door for:
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Cauvery Water Management Authority (CWMA)
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Central Water Commission (CWC)
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To examine the revised DPR before final clearance.
Karnataka’s Rationale
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Bengaluru faces a water deficit of about 500 MLD.
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City’s water demand is projected to rise to 4,000 MLD as population approaches 20 million.
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Karnataka argues that:
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The project will utilise 4.75 TMC of additional water allocated to it by the 2018 Supreme Court judgment.
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The reservoir is meant primarily for drinking water security, not irrigation expansion.
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Tamil Nadu’s Concerns
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As a lower riparian State, Tamil Nadu fears:
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Excessive water storage by Karnataka.
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Reduced and delayed water release during critical agricultural seasons.
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Argues that any unilateral project violates:
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The spirit of inter-State cooperation
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The Cauvery Water Disputes Tribunal (CWDT) award
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Environmental Concerns
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Project would submerge around 4,996 hectares, including:
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Forest land
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Wildlife habitats
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The MoEFCC’s Expert Appraisal Committee (EAC) has stressed the need for an amicable inter-State solution before environmental clearance.
Alternative Solutions Highlighted
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Rainwater harvesting: Potential yield of ~15 TMC annually.
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Reuse of treated wastewater: Could supply ~16 TMC annually for Bengaluru.
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These options are cited as less environmentally disruptive alternatives.
Relevant Prelims Points:
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Detailed Project Report (DPR):
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Technical document detailing cost, design, feasibility, and impacts of a project.
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CWMA:
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Statutory authority to implement the CWDT award and manage Cauvery waters.
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Inter-State River Dispute:
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Conflict between States over sharing and use of river waters under Article 262.
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CWC (Central Water Commission):
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Technical body advising the Centre on water resource projects.
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Benefits of the Project:
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Enhances urban water security
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Potential renewable energy generation
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Flood moderation during high inflow periods
Challenges:
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Inter-State mistrust
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Ecological damage
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Legal and political hurdles
Impact:
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Tests India’s federal water governance framework
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Implications for future inter-State river projects
Relevant Mains Points:
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Facts & Provisions:
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Supreme Court’s 2018 Cauvery verdict
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Role of CWMA and CWC
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Keywords & Static Linkages:
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Cooperative federalism
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Riparian rights
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Sustainable water management
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Environmental Perspective:
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Forest diversion vs development needs
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Way Forward:
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Strengthen inter-State dialogue
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Integrate sustainable urban water solutions
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Ensure transparent CWMA-led assessment
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Balance developmental needs with ecological protection
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UPSC Relevance (GS-wise):
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GS 2: Polity, Federalism, Inter-State Relations
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GS 3: Environment, Water Resources, Infrastructure
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Prelims: CWMA, DPR, Inter-State river disputes
