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
- Jal Jeevan Mission (JJM) is India's flagship rural drinking water scheme, targeting Functional Household Tap Connection (FHTC) to every rural household for safe and adequate potable water. [S1]
- The programme was originally to achieve 100% coverage by 2024; it stalled at ~81% since 2025, prompting extension. [S1][S2]
- A Parliamentary Standing Committee (March 2026) warned that without source sustainability, JJM's objectives for the next 25–30 years will remain "unfulfilled" — directly relevant to GS-II (governance) and GS-III (water resource management). [S4]
- Total revised outlay: ₹8.69 lakh crore (JJM 2.0, approved March 2026) — one of India's largest single-scheme expenditures. [S1][S3]
2. Why in the News
- March 20, 2026: The Hindu reported a Parliamentary Committee observation (based on testimony by the Department of Drinking Water and Sanitation) that water sources under many JJM schemes are being exhausted within 1–2 years of tap installation. [S4]
- The committee found no data from States on how many of the 6.83 lakh sanctioned schemes are fully "source-to-tap" compliant. [S4]
- March 10, 2026: Union Cabinet approved JJM 2.0, extending the mission to 2028 with enhanced central assistance of ₹3.59 lakh crore (up from ₹2.08 lakh crore in 2019–20), shifting focus from infrastructure creation to service delivery. [S3]
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
- Core problem identified (2026): Taps installed but water not flowing — source depletion within 1–2 years of commissioning. [S4]
- Data gap: States have not reported to Centre how many of 6.83 lakh schemes are "source-to-tap" compliant. [S4]
- Committee recommendation: Implement "source-to-tap" schemes where the entire chain (source → storage tank → distribution → tap) is monitored as one integrated unit. [S4]
- JJM 2.0 explicitly shifts from infrastructure-centric to service-delivery model, with strengthened governance and institutional ecosystem. [S3]
Environmental
- Water sources (rivers, lakes, ponds, natural pools) being exhausted due to over-extraction, climate variability, and inadequate aquifer recharge. [S4]
- Mission includes greywater management and rainwater harvesting as source sustainability measures, but implementation has lagged. [S1]
- Groundwater depletion is especially acute in peninsular and arid regions; surface water sources in rain-fed areas seasonal.
- Absence of watershed-level planning means supply schemes are designed without assessing 30-year source yield.
Social
- ~81% coverage means roughly 3.5 crore rural households still without FHTC — disproportionately in remote, tribal, and hilly areas. [S1]
- Women bear the primary burden of water collection; incomplete coverage perpetuates time-poverty and health risks.
- 24.80 lakh women trained as water quality testers — positive community empowerment component. [S1]
- Har Ghar Jal certification given to villages/GPs where 100% FHTC achieved and water quality confirmed.
Economic
- ₹8.69 lakh crore outlay represents significant fiscal commitment; any asset creation without source sustainability = stranded asset risk. [S3]
- Piped water reduces disease burden (diarrhoea, cholera, fluorosis, arsenic poisoning), yielding healthcare savings.
- WHO estimates every $1 invested in WASH returns ~$4 in economic productivity.
Legal / Constitutional
- Water is a State subject (Entry 17, State List, Seventh Schedule) — Centre can only incentivize, not mandate.
- Article 21 (Right to Life) has been judicially interpreted to include right to safe drinking water.
- Funding is shared: Centre–State ratio is 90:10 for NE/Himalayan states; 60:40 for others.
Ethical / Governance
- Parliamentary committee flagged that stranded assets (installed taps with no water) mislead coverage statistics, raising accountability concerns. [S4]
- Outcome vs. output confusion: counting tap connections as "success" without verifying actual water flow is a governance failure.
- Decentralised planning through Village Action Plans (VAPs) and Paani Samitis (Water Committees) is mandated but inconsistently implemented.
6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)
- October 22, 2025: >15.72 crore rural homes receiving safe drinking water via FHTC; ~81.8% coverage. [S1]
- FY 2025–26 (as of Oct 21, 2025): 38.78 lakh samples tested across 2,843 labs in 4,49,961 villages; 24.80 lakh women trained on FTKs. [S1]
- Union Budget 2025–26: JJM allocation enhanced to ₹67,000 crore. [S2]
- March 10, 2026: Cabinet approves JJM 2.0 — extended to 2028; total outlay revised to ₹8.69 lakh crore; central share ₹3.59 lakh crore; pivot to service delivery. [S3]
- March 20, 2026: Parliamentary Committee report flags source sustainability crisis: sources exhausted within 1–2 years at many sites; no state-level data on "source-to-tap" compliance across 6.83 lakh schemes. [S4]
- Funds released to five States (FY 2025–26) post Cabinet approval and structural reform compliance. [S3]
7. Prelims Hooks
- JJM launched on August 15, 2019, by PM Modi as part of Independence Day announcements.
- Nodal ministry: Ministry of Jal Shakti; implementing arm: Department of Drinking Water and Sanitation (DDWS).
- Original target: FHTC to all 19.36 crore rural households by 2024; extended to 2028 under JJM 2.0.
- Coverage as of Oct 2025: ~15.83 crore households (~81.8%) with tap connections. [S1]
- Total sanctioned schemes under JJM: 6.83 lakh. [S4]
- JJM 2.0 total outlay: ₹8.69 lakh crore; central assistance ₹3.59 lakh crore (up from ₹2.08 lakh crore in 2019). [S3]
- FY 2025–26 budget allocation for JJM: ₹67,000 crore. [S2]
- Centre–State funding ratio: 90:10 for NE/Himalayan states; 60:40 for others.
- Water is a State subject — Entry 17, State List, Seventh Schedule of the Constitution.
- Parliamentary committee recommended "source-to-tap" schemes covering the entire supply chain. [S4]
- 24.80 lakh women trained for water quality testing using Field Testing Kits (FTKs) across 5.07 lakh villages. [S1]
- Water sources under JJM include rivers, lakes, ponds, and natural pools — surface + groundwater both used. [S4]
- JJM subsumed the earlier National Rural Drinking Water Programme (NRDWP) (2009).
- Parliamentary Committee warned JJM's objectives for next 25–30 years will remain "unfulfilled" without source sustainability. [S4]
- 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:
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"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)
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"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)
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"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
-
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.
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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.
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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]
-
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.
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Predecessor confusion: JJM subsumed NRDWP (2009–2019), not ARWSP directly. Rajiv Gandhi Drinking Water Mission → NRDWP → JJM is the correct lineage.
11. Sources
- [S1] Jal Jeevan Mission — PIB Press Release (Oct 2025, 15 crore rural families) — https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleasePage.aspx?PRID=2098651 — (Tier 1)
- [S2] Budget Outlay for JJM Enhanced to ₹67,000 Crore — PIB — https://pib.gov.in/PressReleaseIframePage.aspx?PRID=2098368 — (Tier 1)
- [S3] Extension of Jal Jeevan Mission till 2028 / JJM 2.0 Cabinet approval — PIB — https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleasePage.aspx?PRID=2149208 — (Tier 1)
- [S4] "Lack of 'sustainable water sources' will thwart Jal Jeevan Mission: panel" — The Hindu, March 20, 2026 (article content provided as primary source) — https://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/2026-03-20/th_international/articleGQRFO6NN2-13921773.ece — (Tier 4)