Sharing waters


Sharing Waters: Tungabhadra Dam & Inter-State Water Cooperation


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution


4. Core Static Facts

Parameter Detail
River Tungabhadra (tributary of Krishna)
Location Koppal district, Karnataka
Dam type Multipurpose (irrigation + hydropower)
Full reservoir capacity ~105 tmc ft (thousand million cubic feet)
Total irrigation command ~16.4 lakh acres
Karnataka's share 9.26 lakh acres
Andhra Pradesh's share 6.25 lakh acres
Telangana's share 87,000 acres
Telangana's water entitlement 15.9 TMC
Water allocation ratio 65:35 (Karnataka : undivided AP) per KWDT-I
Governing body Tungabhadra Board
Nodal Ministry (Centre) Ministry of Jal Shakti
Tribunal Krishna Water Disputes Tribunal-I (Justice Bachawat)
Statutory basis Inter-State River Water Disputes Act, 1956
Relevant constitutional provision Article 262 (adjudication of inter-State water disputes)
New gates cost ₹51 crore (33 high-grade steel spillway gates)
Gate lifespan 60 years
Upper Bhadra Project Karnataka lift-irrigation scheme, upstream of dam — contentious [S5]

5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Economic

Geopolitical / Strategic

Legal / Constitutional

Environmental

Administrative

Ethical / Governance


6. Recent Developments (last 12–18 months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. The Tungabhadra River is a tributary of the Krishna River. [S5]
  2. The Tungabhadra Dam is located in Koppal district, Karnataka. [S1]
  3. Total irrigation command of Tungabhadra Dam: ~16.4 lakh acres across three states. [S1]
  4. Karnataka's irrigation share from Tungabhadra: 9.26 lakh acres; Andhra Pradesh: 6.25 lakh acres; Telangana: 87,000 acres. [S1]
  5. The governing inter-State body for Tungabhadra is the Tungabhadra Board (not KWDT). [S5]
  6. Water allocation ratio (Karnataka : undivided Andhra Pradesh) per KWDT-I: 65:35. [S5]
  7. Telangana's TMC entitlement from Tungabhadra system: 15.9 TMC (carved from AP's share post-2014 bifurcation). [S5]
  8. Inter-State river disputes in India are adjudicated under Article 262 of the Constitution. [S5]
  9. The enabling legislation for tribunals: Inter-State River Water Disputes Act, 1956. [S5]
  10. KWDT-I was chaired by Justice R.S. Bachawat. [S5]
  11. One crest gate of Tungabhadra Dam was washed away in August 2024 when the reservoir held 105 tmc ft. [S1]
  12. The 33 new spillway gates cost ₹51 crore and are expected to last 60 years. [S1]
  13. The Upper Bhadra Project is a lift-irrigation scheme of Karnataka located upstream of the Tungabhadra Dam — contested by AP before the Supreme Court. [S5]
  14. Nodal ministry for the Tungabhadra Dam (Centre): Ministry of Jal Shakti. [S1]
  15. The Navali parallel reservoir proposal was discussed at the June 25, 2026 tripartite CM meeting. [S3]

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper mapping: - GS-II: Inter-State relations, cooperative federalism, Centre-State relations, dispute resolution mechanisms - GS-III: Water management, irrigation infrastructure, river basin management

Syllabus headings: - Devolution of resources and powers — Centre-State, Inter-State relations - Infrastructure — irrigation, water management

Plausible Mains question stems: 1. "The Tungabhadra Dam is often cited as a model of cooperative federalism in water management. Examine the institutional mechanisms that have enabled this, and the challenges that continue to strain the relationship among riparian states." 2. "Critically analyse the legal and administrative framework governing inter-State river water disputes in India, with reference to Article 262, the Inter-State River Water Disputes Act 1956, and recent tribunal decisions." 3. "The bifurcation of Andhra Pradesh in 2014 created new complexities in the Krishna-Tungabhadra water-sharing architecture. Discuss the implications for water governance in peninsular India."


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
Krishna Water Disputes Tribunal (KWDT I & II) Parent tribunal that allocates Tungabhadra waters; Bachawat Award is binding
Inter-State River Water Disputes Act, 1956 Statutory framework under which the Tungabhadra Board and all such bodies operate
Article 262 & water federalism Constitutional basis for excluding Supreme Court jurisdiction; key Prelims/Mains fact
Upper Bhadra Project (National Project) Upstream Karnataka lift-irrigation scheme currently challenged in SC by AP
Cauvery Water Disputes Contrast case: protracted litigation vs. Tungabhadra's cooperative model
Reorganisation of States Act, 2014 (AP) Created Telangana; triggered re-allocation of water entitlements without fresh tribunal
National Water Policy (2012) Policy framework for basin-wise integrated water resource management
Interlinking of Rivers (Ken-Betwa) Broader national water transfer policy; inter-State consent a key issue

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Wrong river system: Tungabhadra is a tributary of Krishna, not Godavari — do not conflate with Godavari basin disputes.
  2. Tungabhadra Board ≠ Krishna Water Disputes Tribunal: The Board is the operational/regulatory body; KWDT-I/II are quasi-judicial allocation bodies — distinct institutions and functions.
  3. Telangana's share: Telangana was not an original party to the Bachawat Award (1973); its 15.9 TMC is carved from undivided Andhra Pradesh's allocation post-2014 — not a fresh tribunal award.
  4. Wrong district: The dam is in Koppal district, not Bellary or Raichur (common confusion as it borders all three).
  5. Article 262 vs. Article 131: Article 131 gives SC original jurisdiction over Centre-State/State-State disputes; but Article 262 specifically ousts SC jurisdiction over inter-State water disputes — a frequent MCQ trap.

11. Sources