When politics met policy shortcuts


When Politics Met Policy Shortcuts

Rayalaseema Lift Irrigation Scheme & Krishna River Water Politics — UPSC Study Note


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution


4. Core Static Facts

Parameter Detail
Scheme Rayalaseema Lift Irrigation Scheme (RLIS)
River Krishna River — from Srisailam Reservoir
Technical Specs Draw 34,722 cusecs daily when Srisailam reaches 800 feet level; lift water to Srisailam Right Main Canal (SRMC)
Estimated Cost 3,825 crore (approx.)
Water Quantum 3 TMC per day from Sangameshwaram
Governing Act AP Reorganisation Act, 2014
Statutory Body Krishna River Management Board (KRMB)
Apex Oversight Apex Council (chaired by Union Jal Shakti Minister; CMs of AP and Telangana are members)
Earlier Tribunal Krishna Water Disputes Tribunal-I (KWDT-I) — total allocation: 811 TMC between AP and Telangana
New Tribunal KWDT-II — Terms of Reference approved by Cabinet (2023) on Telangana's request
Enabling Law for Tribunals Inter-State River Water Disputes (ISRWD) Act, 1956
GO No. 69 Government Order from undivided AP era governing Krishna water use — deliberately kept "under the carpet" post-bifurcation
Ministry Ministry of Jal Shakti (nodal for KRMB/GRMB notifications)
Gazette Notification KRMB and GRMB jurisdictions notified: 15 July 2021
Beneficiary Region Rayalaseema — historically backward, drought-prone region of AP

5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Economic

Legal / Constitutional

Ethical / Governance

Administrative

Geopolitical / Strategic (Intra-national)

Social


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks (High-Density Factual Bullets)

  1. RLIS proposes to draw 34,722 cusecs of water daily from Srisailam Reservoir when water level is at 800 feet.
  2. The scheme involves lifting water to the Srisailam Right Main Canal (SRMC) from Sangameshwaram.
  3. AP Reorganisation Act, 2014 — Sections 84–89 — mandates KRMB appraisal + Apex Council sanction for any new project on shared rivers.
  4. Krishna River Management Board (KRMB) directed AP to stop RLIS tender proceedings in 2020 pending mandatory clearances.
  5. Telangana moved the National Green Tribunal (NGT) against RLIS in 2020.
  6. The Apex Council on inter-State river management is chaired by the Union Minister for Jal Shakti; the two State CMs are members.
  7. KWDT-I allocated a total of 811 TMC of Krishna water to be shared between AP and Telangana.
  8. Terms of Reference for KWDT-II were approved by the Union Cabinet on Telangana's request (2023) under the ISRWD Act, 1956.
  9. KRMB and GRMB jurisdictions were formally notified via Gazette by Ministry of Jal Shakti on 15 July 2021.
  10. GO No. 69 (undivided AP era) remains a binding but deliberately suppressed order on Krishna water use — relevant post-bifurcation under the Reorganisation Act.
  11. Inter-State river water disputes are adjudicated under Article 262 of the Constitution + ISRWD Act, 1956.
  12. The AP Reorganisation (Amendment) Bill was introduced in 2015 to address implementation gaps in the 2014 Act.
  13. Both AP and Telangana are required under the 2014 Act to submit Detailed Project Reports (DPRs) to KRMB for all new projects before commencing work.

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper GS-II (primary) — Governance, Federalism, Centre–State Relations; GS-III (secondary) — Water Resource Management
Syllabus Headings GS-II: "Devolution of powers and finances up to local levels"; "Issues and challenges pertaining to the federal structure"; "Mechanisms for dispute resolution"; GS-III: "Major crops, cropping patterns, irrigation"

Plausible Mains Question Stems: 1. "The political short-circuiting of statutory water-sharing mechanisms between Andhra Pradesh and Telangana reveals structural weaknesses in India's inter-State river dispute resolution architecture. Critically examine." (GS-II) 2. "Government Order No. 69 and the AP Reorganisation Act, 2014 create binding obligations on both successor States. Yet political expediency repeatedly overrides legal compliance. What institutional reforms can make the Apex Council and River Management Boards more effective?" (GS-II) 3. "Rayalaseema's chronic water insecurity is both a developmental failure and a governance failure. Analyse the multi-dimensional dimensions of the RLIS controversy in this context." (GS-II/III)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
Inter-State River Water Disputes Act, 1956 Primary statute governing all tribunal-based dispute resolution on shared rivers
AP Reorganisation Act, 2014 — full provisions Parent law for KRMB, GRMB, Apex Council, and all bifurcation-linked water rights
Krishna Water Disputes Tribunal-I & II Direct arbiter of the 811 TMC Krishna allocation; KWDT-II is the live proceeding
Cauvery Water Disputes Parallel case study in inter-State water politics; SC role, CWMA enforcement
Article 262 & Seventh Schedule (Entry 17, State List) Constitutional basis for water as a State subject vs. Centre's adjudication role
National Water Policy (2012) Framework for integrated river basin management — often cited but rarely implemented
Federalism & Finance Commission Broader context of Centre–State asymmetries that shape bargaining in bifurcation disputes

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Confusing KRMB with KWDT: The Krishna River Management Board (KRMB) is an administrative/regulatory body under the 2014 Act; the Krishna Water Disputes Tribunal (KWDT) is a quasi-judicial adjudicating body under the ISRWD Act, 1956 — these are separate institutions with different mandates.
  2. Misidentifying the Ministry: KRMB and inter-State water boards fall under Ministry of Jal Shakti (not Ministry of Water Resources, which was merged into Jal Shakti in 2019) — an easy trap in pre-2019 era questions.
  3. Treating Article 262 as absolute: Article 262 bars Supreme Court jurisdiction over inter-State river disputes only if Parliament so provides (which it has, under ISRWD Act, 1956) — the SC can still exercise writ jurisdiction in some circumstances.
  4. Assuming GO No. 69 was abrogated: It was not formally repealed; its continued legal validity post-bifurcation is precisely what both State governments avoid acknowledging.
  5. Conflating RLIS with other Krishna projects: The Banakacherla Cross Regulator is a separate AP project on Krishna — also disputed with Telangana — distinct from RLIS; do not club them in answers.

11. Sources