Lack of ‘sustainable water sources’ will thwart Jal Jeevan Mission: panel


Jal Jeevan Mission — Lack of Sustainable Water Sources

UPSC Prelims + Mains Study Note


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution

Year Milestone
1972–73 Accelerated Rural Water Supply Programme (ARWSP) — first centrally sponsored scheme for rural water
1999 Rajiv Gandhi National Drinking Water Mission (RGNDWM) renamed from ARWSP
2009 National Rural Drinking Water Programme (NRDWP) launched
August 15, 2019 JJM launched by PM Modi; target: FHTC to all 19.36 crore rural households by 2024
2021 Jal Jeevan Mission (Urban) launched separately
2024 Coverage ~81%; deadline missed; mission continued without fresh formal extension
March 10, 2026 Cabinet approves JJM 2.0: extended to 2028; outlay revised to ₹8.69 lakh crore; pivot to service-delivery model [S3]

Predecessors: ARWSP → RGNDWM → NRDWP → JJM. JJM subsumed NRDWP.


4. Core Static Facts

Scheme Identity - Full name: Jal Jeevan Mission (Har Ghar Jal) - Launched: August 15, 2019 - Ministry: Ministry of Jal Shakti (Department of Drinking Water and Sanitation — DDWS) - Type: Centrally Sponsored Scheme (CSS) - Nodal body: DDWS under Ministry of Jal Shakti

Financial Scope - Original outlay (2019): ₹3.60 lakh crore (central share ₹2.08 lakh crore) - FY 2025–26 budget: ₹67,000 crore [S2] - JJM 2.0 total outlay: ₹8.69 lakh crore; central assistance ₹3.59 lakh crore [S3]

Coverage Targets & Status - Target households: ~19.36 crore rural households - Households with tap connections (Oct 2025): >15.83 crore (~81.8%) [S1] - Villages covered for water quality testing: 4,49,961 [S1] - Water samples tested (2025–26, as of Oct 21, 2025): 38.78 lakh across 2,843 laboratories [S1] - Women trained for field testing: 24.80 lakh (Field Testing Kits in 5.07 lakh villages) [S1] - Sanctioned schemes: 6.83 lakh [S4]

Key Components - Source development & augmentation - Bulk water transfer & treatment plants - Distribution network - Greywater management, rainwater harvesting, water conservation - "Source to tap" accountability


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Administrative

Environmental

Social

Economic

Legal / Constitutional

Ethical / Governance


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. JJM launched on August 15, 2019, by PM Modi as part of Independence Day announcements.
  2. Nodal ministry: Ministry of Jal Shakti; implementing arm: Department of Drinking Water and Sanitation (DDWS).
  3. Original target: FHTC to all 19.36 crore rural households by 2024; extended to 2028 under JJM 2.0.
  4. Coverage as of Oct 2025: ~15.83 crore households (~81.8%) with tap connections. [S1]
  5. Total sanctioned schemes under JJM: 6.83 lakh. [S4]
  6. JJM 2.0 total outlay: ₹8.69 lakh crore; central assistance ₹3.59 lakh crore (up from ₹2.08 lakh crore in 2019). [S3]
  7. FY 2025–26 budget allocation for JJM: ₹67,000 crore. [S2]
  8. Centre–State funding ratio: 90:10 for NE/Himalayan states; 60:40 for others.
  9. Water is a State subject — Entry 17, State List, Seventh Schedule of the Constitution.
  10. Parliamentary committee recommended "source-to-tap" schemes covering the entire supply chain. [S4]
  11. 24.80 lakh women trained for water quality testing using Field Testing Kits (FTKs) across 5.07 lakh villages. [S1]
  12. Water sources under JJM include rivers, lakes, ponds, and natural pools — surface + groundwater both used. [S4]
  13. JJM subsumed the earlier National Rural Drinking Water Programme (NRDWP) (2009).
  14. Parliamentary Committee warned JJM's objectives for next 25–30 years will remain "unfulfilled" without source sustainability. [S4]
  15. JJM 2.0 approved March 10, 2026 — shifts from infrastructure-centric to service-delivery model. [S3]

8. Mains Relevance

GS Papers: - GS-II: Government policies and interventions; welfare schemes; federal issues (state vs. central subject) - GS-III: Water resource management; environmental sustainability; infrastructure

Syllabus Headings: - GS-II: "Welfare schemes for vulnerable sections of the population... mechanisms, laws, institutions and bodies constituted for the protection and betterment of these vulnerable sections." - GS-III: "Conservation, environmental pollution and degradation, environmental impact assessment."; "Infrastructure: Energy, Ports, Roads, Airports, Railways etc."

Plausible Mains Question Stems:

  1. "The Jal Jeevan Mission risks becoming a story of installed taps rather than delivered water. Critically examine the source sustainability challenge and suggest a framework to address it." (GS-III)

  2. "Evaluate the governance and federalism challenges in implementing Jal Jeevan Mission. How does water being a State subject affect the Centre's ability to ensure last-mile delivery?" (GS-II)

  3. "Universal access to safe drinking water is both a constitutional right and a development imperative. Assess the progress of Jal Jeevan Mission against this dual mandate, with reference to recent parliamentary committee findings." (GS-II / GS-III)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
National Water Policy (2012) Policy framework that underpins source sustainability and integrated water resource management
Atal Bhujal Yojana Groundwater management scheme — directly linked to source depletion problems under JJM
MGNREGS & Water Conservation Convergence with water body restoration; Jal Shakti Abhiyan uses MGNREGS for recharge works
Jal Shakti Abhiyan (Catch the Rain) Seasonal campaign for rainwater harvesting and watershed management, critical to JJM source sustainability
Seventh Schedule — State/Concurrent Lists Constitutional allocation of water as State subject; Centre's legislative competence limits
Pradhan Mantri Krishi Sinchayee Yojana (PMKSY) "More crop per drop" — agricultural water use competes with drinking water sources
WASH (Water, Sanitation, Hygiene) — UN SDG 6 SDG 6 targets universal safe water by 2030; JJM is India's primary vehicle; international comparison
Climate Change & Water Stress IPCC reports link groundwater depletion and erratic monsoon to rural water insecurity

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Ministry confusion: JJM is under Ministry of Jal Shakti (specifically DDWS), NOT Ministry of Housing & Urban Affairs (which handles urban water/AMRUT). Jal Jeevan Mission Urban is separate.

  2. Original vs. revised deadline: Original target was 2024, not 2022 or 2025. Extended to 2028 under JJM 2.0. Do not confuse with Swachh Bharat Mission phases.

  3. Coverage statistic trap: ~81% refers to households with tap connections installed, NOT households receiving water actually flowing — the parliamentary committee specifically called out this distinction as the core governance failure. [S4]

  4. Funding ratio error: 90:10 applies to NE + Himalayan states (not all backward/EAS states); all others are 60:40. PMKSY and JJM ratios are often confused.

  5. Predecessor confusion: JJM subsumed NRDWP (2009–2019), not ARWSP directly. Rajiv Gandhi Drinking Water Mission → NRDWP → JJM is the correct lineage.


11. Sources