Recasting sanitation with urban-rural partnerships
Recasting Sanitation with Urban-Rural Partnerships
UPSC Integrated Study Note | GS-II / GS-III
1. At a Glance
- Core idea: After achieving near-universal toilet construction under Swachh Bharat Mission (SBM), India's next frontier is Faecal Sludge Management (FSM) — safely collecting, transporting and treating waste from rural septic tanks and pits. [S1][S2]
- Urban-rural convergence is the key innovation: rural gram panchayats formally partner with nearby urban local bodies (ULBs) to share existing sewage/faecal treatment infrastructure, avoiding costly duplication. [S3]
- Satara district, Maharashtra has emerged as a pioneering model, operationalising inter-institutional agreements between a Panchayat Samiti and a Municipal Council. [S3]
- UPSC relevance: intersects Panchayati Raj institutions, urban governance (74th Amendment), SBM, public health, federalism, and SDG-6 (clean water & sanitation).
2. Why in the News
- The Hindu (3 January 2026) featured the Satara experiment as a template for the next phase of India's sanitation reform. [S4]
- As of October 2025, 5.68 lakh villages (~97% of all villages) have been declared ODF Plus, but faecal sludge management remains the weakest link, prompting policy focus. [S1][S4]
- SBM-G Phase II (operational since 2020-21), with its ODF Plus framework explicitly mandating Solid and Liquid Waste Management (SLWM), is the direct legislative-policy trigger. [S2]
3. Background & Evolution
| Year | Milestone |
|---|---|
| 2014 | Swachh Bharat Mission launched (2 Oct 2014); target: ODF India by 2 Oct 2019. [S1] |
| 2019 | Rural India declared ODF (all villages); >12 crore household toilets built. [S4] |
| 2020-21 | SBM-G Phase II launched; focus shifts from toilet construction to sustainability + SLWM. [S2] |
| 2020 | SBM-G Phase II Operational Guidelines published; introduces ODF Plus categories (Aspiring / Rising / Model). [S2] |
| 2021-25 | ODF Plus rollout; FSM identified as critical gap in peri-urban and rural areas. [S1][S3] |
| Oct 2025 | 5.68 lakh villages (~97%) achieve ODF Plus status. [S4] |
| 2025-26 | Satara district urban-rural FSM partnership goes operational; Mayani cluster FSTP sanctioned. [S3][S4] |
Predecessors: Nirmal Bharat Abhiyan (2012–14); Total Sanitation Campaign (1999–2012).
4. Core Static Facts
Scheme Parameters
- Full name: Swachh Bharat Mission (Grameen) Phase II [SBM-G II]
- Implementing Ministry: Ministry of Jal Shakti (Department of Drinking Water & Sanitation — DDWS) [S2]
- Launched: 2020-21; target year: 2024-25 (extended in practice) [S2]
- Total outlay: ₹1,40,881 crore for Phase II [S2]
- ODF Plus definition: A village that (a) sustains ODF status AND (b) has satisfactory arrangements for SLWM and ensures visual cleanliness. [S2]
ODF Plus Sub-Categories
| Category | Criteria |
|---|---|
| Aspiring | ODF sustained + either solid OR liquid waste managed |
| Rising | ODF sustained + both solid AND liquid waste managed |
| Model | Rising criteria met + visual cleanliness + grey/black water treated |
Faecal Sludge Management (FSM) — Three Permitted Interventions [S1]
- Trenching (burial/land treatment)
- Co-treatment (at existing urban STPs)
- Dedicated FSTP (Faecal Sludge Treatment Plant)
Satara Model Specifics [S3][S4]
- Location: Satara district, Maharashtra
- Urban partner: Satara Municipal Council (SMC)
- Rural partner: Satara Panchayat Samiti
- FSTP capacity: 65 KLD (kilo litres per day)
- Villages linked: Jakatwadi, Songaon, Kodoli, Degaon (4 villages)
- Cost to villages: Nil (zero-cost access under formal MoU)
- Mechanism: Authorised desludging vehicles from villages transport sludge to city FSTP at no charge
- Cluster alternative: Mayani — cluster-level FSTP under SBM-G to serve ~80 surrounding villages
5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis
Economic
- Shared infrastructure eliminates need to build separate rural FSTPs — capital cost saving for gram panchayats which have limited fiscal capacity. [S3]
- Desludging market creation: formal authorised desludging operators generate rural sanitation economy and employment. [S4]
- SBM-G Phase II's ₹1,40,881 crore outlay provides fiscal architecture for scale-up. [S2]
Social
- Women and vulnerable groups are disproportionate beneficiaries — ODF gains risk reversal if faecal waste is not safely managed, especially for girls and women (open defecation danger). [S4]
- Community behavioural change (regular desludging practice) is an explicit SBM-G II component, addressing the "last-mile" attitude gap. [S2]
- Peri-urban and rural poor — who cannot afford private desludging — benefit most from zero-cost access to urban STPs. [S3]
Environmental
- Unsafe faecal sludge disposal contaminates groundwater and surface water, undermining SDG-6 targets. [S1]
- Co-treatment at STPs reduces open discharge, protecting local water bodies.
- Cluster-level FSTPs enable treated effluent reuse for agriculture — circular economy potential. [S3]
Legal / Constitutional
- Article 243G (11th Schedule, Item 23): Panchayats responsible for health and sanitation; urban-rural MoUs are an instrument to operationalise this. [S2]
- Article 243W (12th Schedule): Municipalities responsible for regulation of slaughterhouses and sanitation — basis for ULB to extend services to peri-rural areas.
- SBM-G Phase II operates under the National Rural Employment Guarantee Act convergence and DDWS administrative orders, not a standalone statute.
Administrative / Governance
- Key bottleneck: Institutional silos — Gram Panchayats (rural) and Municipal Councils (urban) operate under separate statutes (Panchayati Raj Acts vs. Municipal Acts), making formal service-sharing agreements rare. [S3][S4]
- Satara innovation: A formal written MoU (not informal arrangement) between Panchayat Samiti and Municipal Council — replicable template.
- District Collector / DM coordination is critical to facilitate cross-institutional agreements.
- States with strong District Planning Committees (DPCs — Article 243ZD) are better placed to mainstream this model.
Scientific / Technological
- Faecal Sludge Treatment Plants (FSTPs): Primary treatment (settling/thickening), secondary treatment (drying beds or planted drying beds), and effluent polishing.
- Desludging technology: Vacuum tankers / mechanical desludging equipment — currently sparse in rural India; scaling requires market development.
- Real-time monitoring: SBM-G portal tracks ODF Plus status; FSM tracking integration is nascent.
6. Recent Developments (last 12–18 months)
- October 2025: India achieves 5.68 lakh ODF Plus villages (~97%), per DDWS data. [S4]
- January 2026: The Hindu (3 Jan 2026) spotlights Satara district model as innovation in urban-rural FSM convergence. [S4]
- 2025: Mayani (Satara district) selected for cluster-level FSTP under SBM-G to serve ~80 villages — funded under Phase II. [S3]
- 2025: Formal MoU between Satara Panchayat Samiti and Satara Municipal Council operationalised — authorised desludging vehicles granted free access to city's 65 KLD FSTP. [S3]
- 2024-25: SBM-G Phase II original target year; government focus on completing SLWM targets that lagged behind ODF Plus declarations. [S2]
7. Prelims Hooks
- SBM-G Phase II was launched in 2020-21 with a total outlay of ₹1,40,881 crore. [S2]
- The implementing ministry for SBM-G is the Ministry of Jal Shakti (DDWS), not the Ministry of Housing & Urban Affairs. [S2]
- ODF Plus has three sub-categories: Aspiring, Rising, and Model. [S2]
- As of October 2025, 5.68 lakh villages (~97% of all villages in India) have been declared ODF Plus. [S4]
- 12 crore household toilets were built in rural India under SBM (Phase I). [S4]
- The Satara FSTP has a capacity of 65 kilo litres per day (KLD). [S3]
- Four villages linked to Satara city FSTP: Jakatwadi, Songaon, Kodoli, and Degaon. [S3]
- The three FSM interventions permitted under SBM-G guidelines are: trenching, co-treatment, and dedicated FSTP. [S1]
- Mayani (Satara district) is being developed as a cluster-level FSTP to serve approximately 80 villages. [S3]
- ODF Plus goes beyond toilet construction to mandate Solid and Liquid Waste Management (SLWM). [S2]
- Urban-rural FSM convergence in Satara involves a formal MoU between a Panchayat Samiti (rural) and a Municipal Council (urban). [S3]
- SBM was launched on 2 October 2014 (Gandhi Jayanti). [S1]
- The predecessor to SBM was the Nirmal Bharat Abhiyan (2012–2014). [Background knowledge, cross-check via [S2]]
- Article 243G (11th Schedule, Item 23) assigns health and sanitation to Panchayati Raj Institutions.
8. Mains Relevance
| GS Paper | Syllabus Heading |
|---|---|
| GS-II | Government policies and interventions for development; Issues relating to development and management of Social Sector/Services: Health, Education, Human Resources; Welfare schemes for vulnerable sections |
| GS-II | Devolution of powers and finances up to local levels; Panchayati Raj; Issues of federalism |
| GS-III | Infrastructure: Urban/Rural; Environment and ecology; Waste management |
Plausible Mains Questions
- "Faecal Sludge Management is the unfinished agenda of the Swachh Bharat Mission. Examine how urban-rural partnerships can bridge this gap, with reference to emerging models in India." (GS-III, 15 marks)
- "The Satara district experiment in Maharashtra illustrates that breaking institutional silos between Panchayati Raj institutions and Urban Local Bodies is essential for effective service delivery. Critically analyse." (GS-II, 10 marks)
- "Open Defecation Free status alone does not ensure safe sanitation. Discuss the challenges and policy interventions needed for the transition from ODF to ODF Plus in rural India." (GS-II/III, 15 marks)
9. Related Topics to Study Next
| Topic | Why Connected |
|---|---|
| Swachh Bharat Mission (Urban) — SBM-U 2.0 | Counterpart urban scheme; convergence with SBM-G on FSM |
| Jal Jeevan Mission | Same ministry (Jal Shakti); water-sanitation nexus; rural piped water enables toilet use |
| AMRUT 2.0 | Urban sewerage/FSTP infrastructure that rural areas may co-use |
| 73rd & 74th Constitutional Amendments | Legal basis for PRIs and ULBs; understanding institutional silos requires knowledge of both |
| SDG-6 (Clean Water & Sanitation) | India's international commitments; FSM is a SDG-6 sub-target |
| National Policy on Faecal Sludge & Septage Management (2017) | Policy document by MoHUA — key reference for FSM norms |
| District Planning Committees (Article 243ZD) | Constitutional mechanism for urban-rural planning integration |
| 15th Finance Commission Grants to Local Bodies | Funding stream for rural sanitation infrastructure — tied vs untied grants |
10. Common Errors / Trap Areas
- Wrong ministry: SBM-G is under Ministry of Jal Shakti (DDWS), not MoHUA. SBM-Urban is under MoHUA. Confusing the two is a classic trap.
- ODF ≠ ODF Plus: Declaring a village ODF (toilet exists) is Phase I; ODF Plus requires SLWM and waste treatment — a qualitatively higher standard. Do not conflate.
- Year confusion: SBM Phase I launched 2014; SBM-G Phase II launched 2020-21 (not 2019). The original target for Phase II was 2024-25.
- Toilet count: The figure of 12 crore toilets is for rural India. Urban figures under SBM-U are separate and distinct.
- FSM model location: The Satara experiment is in Maharashtra, not a southern state. Some notes erroneously place urban-rural sanitation models in Tamil Nadu or Andhra Pradesh (which have separate but different examples). Satara specifically involves 4 villages and 65 KLD capacity.
11. Sources
- [S1] Introduction to Swachh Bharat Mission Grameen – Phase II — https://static.pib.gov.in/WriteReadData/userfiles/file/SBMMX4S.pdf — (Tier 1: pib.gov.in)
- [S2] SBM-G Phase II Operational Guidelines 2020 — https://swachhbharatmission.ddws.gov.in/sites/default/files/Guidelines/SBMG%20Phase-II%20Operational%20Guidelines.pdf — (Tier 1: gov.in domain — DDWS/Ministry of Jal Shakti)
- [S3] CWAS/CEPT — Faecal Sludge and Septage Management (FSSM) Plan for Satara; Reuse Plan for Satara — https://cwas.org.in/resources/file_manager/fssm_plan_satara.pdf — (Tier 3/reference: technical research institution)
- [S4] The Hindu — "Recasting sanitation with urban-rural partnerships" (3 January 2026, p.6) — https://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/2026-01-03/th_international/articleG22FCUTS0-12975689.ece — (Tier 4: thehindu.com)