In the presence of Union Home Minister and Minister of Cooperation Shri Amit Shah, the governments of Rajasthan and Haryana inks an important agreement for construction and implementation of Yamuna Water Project

I have sufficient Tier 1 facts. Composing the study note now.


UPSC Study Note: Rajasthan–Haryana Yamuna Water Project Agreement


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution

Year Milestone
Pre-1997 (≈3 decades ago) Origin of the water-sharing dispute between Rajasthan and Haryana over Rajasthan's entitlement to Yamuna water [S1]
1994 Upper Yamuna River Board (UYRB) constituted to allocate Yamuna water among riparian states: Uttarakhand, Himachal Pradesh, Uttar Pradesh, Haryana, Rajasthan, and Delhi [S3]
15 Feb 2018 7th Meeting of the Upper Yamuna Review Committee directed Rajasthan to prepare a DPR for transferring its Yamuna share from Tajewala Head / Hathnikund to Jhunjhunu and Churu districts [S2]
2023 MoU signed by Haryana and Rajasthan for joint DPR preparation; both states formed Task Forces; Rajasthan engaged a consultant for DPR preparation [S2]
2024 Discussions held by Union Jal Shakti Minister Gajendra Singh Shekhawat with CMs of Haryana and Rajasthan on project implementation timelines [S3]
2025 Formal agreement signed in presence of Home Minister Amit Shah — project transitions from DPR/planning to construction and implementation stage [S1]

Predecessors / related: - Lakhwar Multipurpose Project (Yamuna, Uttarakhand): MoU signed in 2019 by six states + Centre; key upstream storage that will augment downstream Yamuna flows benefiting Rajasthan in later phases [S5] - Renukaji Dam and Kishau Dam: the three upper Yamuna basin storages whose completion will unlock larger year-round supplies to Rajasthan [S2][S6] - Western Yamuna Canal (WYC): the existing Haryana canal originating at Hathnikund through which Delhi's and Haryana's shares are first met before surplus flows to Rajasthan [S2]


4. Core Static Facts

Project Identity - Full name: Yamuna Water Pipeline Project (also referred to as Yamuna Flood Water Project for Shekhawati Region) [S2][S4] - Key headwork / diversion point: Hathnikund Barrage, Yamunanagar district, Haryana (also referenced as Tajewala Head) [S2] - Mode of conveyance: Underground pipeline system [S2] - Operational season (Phase-1): July to October (monsoon surplus / flood flows) [S2]

Quantity & Capacity - Phase-1 water transfer: Up to 577 MCM (Million Cubic Metres) of Yamuna water [S2] - Trigger condition: Transfers commence only after Western Yamuna Canal has utilised its full capacity of 24,000 cusecs (including Delhi's share) [S2] - Water classified as flood/surplus water — previously flowing unused to the sea [S1][S4]

Beneficiary Districts

State Districts
Rajasthan Sikar, Churu, Jhunjhunu (Shekhawati region) + other districts [S1][S2]
Haryana Bhiwani, Fatehabad [S1]

Purpose: Primarily drinking water supply; irrigation to follow in later phases [S2]

Institutional Framework - Ministry: Ministry of Jal Shakti (Department of Water Resources, River Development & Ganga Rejuvenation) [S1][S3] - Technical oversight body: Central Water Commission (CWC) and Upper Yamuna River Board (UYRB) — provide technical support for DPR [S2] - DPR timeline: Both states mandated to finalise DPR within 4 months of MoU [S2] - Enabling framework: Upper Yamuna River Board (constituted under Inter-State River Water Disputes Act, 1956 read with River Boards Act, 1956); Article 262 of the Constitution [S3]

Future Phases - After construction of Renukaji, Lakhwar, and Kishau dams (three identified storages in upper Yamuna basin), Rajasthan's share will be conveyed year-round for both drinking water and irrigation purposes [S2]


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Economic

Social

Environmental

Legal / Constitutional

Ethical / Governance (Federalism)

Administrative


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks (High-Density Factual Bullets)

  1. The Yamuna Water Pipeline Project will transfer water from Hathnikund Barrage (Yamunanagar, Haryana) to Rajasthan through underground pipelines. [S2]
  2. Phase-1 envisages transfer of up to 577 MCM of Yamuna water annually, operative during July to October. [S2]
  3. Transfers are triggered only after Western Yamuna Canal exhausts its full capacity of 24,000 cusecs, including Delhi's share. [S2]
  4. Rajasthan's beneficiary districts: Sikar, Churu, Jhunjhunu (Shekhawati region) + others. [S1][S2]
  5. Haryana's beneficiary districts under this agreement: Bhiwani and Fatehabad. [S1]
  6. The Upper Yamuna Review Committee — in its 7th meeting (15 February 2018) — first directed Rajasthan to prepare the DPR for this project. [S2]
  7. Technical support for the DPR is provided by CWC (Central Water Commission) and UYRB (Upper Yamuna River Board). [S2]
  8. DPR was to be finalised within 4 months of the MoU between the two states. [S2]
  9. Post-completion of Renukaji, Lakhwar, and Kishau dams, Rajasthan will receive its Yamuna share year-round (not just during monsoon). [S2]
  10. The agreement was brokered by the Ministry of Home Affairs (Union Home Minister Amit Shah) — not directly by the Jal Shakti Ministry alone. [S1]
  11. The dispute being resolved is described as "almost 3 decades old" — originating in the pre-1997 period. [S1]
  12. The water utilised is surplus/flood water — previously flowing unused — not a fresh reallocation from existing consumptive uses. [S1][S4]
  13. Article 262 of the Constitution empowers Parliament to legislate on inter-state river water disputes — the statutory basis for UYRB's authority. [S3]
  14. The Lakhwar Multipurpose Project MoU (2019) involved six states — Uttarakhand, UP, Himachal Pradesh, Rajasthan, Haryana, and Delhi. [S5]
  15. This settlement was achieved through negotiated bilateral agreement — bypassing the formal tribunal route under the Inter-State River Water Disputes Act, 1956. [S1][S3]

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper Mapping:

Paper Syllabus Heading
GS-II Federalism; inter-state relations; functions and responsibilities of Union vis-à-vis States; mechanisms for dispute resolution
GS-II Government policies and interventions for development in various sectors; issues arising out of their design and implementation
GS-III Conservation, environmental pollution and degradation; water resource management; infrastructure

Plausible Mains Question Stems:

  1. "The Rajasthan-Haryana Yamuna Water Agreement of 2025 is cited as a model of cooperative federalism. Critically examine the constitutional and institutional framework governing inter-state river water disputes in India and assess the limitations of negotiated settlements vis-à-vis tribunal awards." (GS-II)

  2. "India's water-stressed districts face a paradox: flood waters flow to the sea while aquifers are over-exploited. Using the Yamuna Water Pipeline Project as a case study, analyse the technical, environmental, and governance challenges of harnessing monsoon surplus for year-round supply in arid regions." (GS-III)

  3. "Cooperative federalism in resource-sharing requires both institutional architecture and political will. Evaluate the role of the Centre in resolving the decades-long Rajasthan-Haryana Yamuna water dispute, and discuss what this implies for other pending inter-state water conflicts." (GS-II)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
Inter-State River Water Disputes Act, 1956 & Article 262 Direct legal framework; understand tribunal mechanism vs. negotiated settlement [S3]
Upper Yamuna River Board (UYRB) & Yamuna Water Allocation (1994) Governing body for Yamuna; allocation percentages for all six riparian states/UTs [S3]
Lakhwar, Renukaji & Kishau Multipurpose Dams Phase-2 of this project depends on their completion; each has its own inter-state politics [S2][S5][S6]
Jal Jeevan Mission Drinking water supply to rural households; Shekhawati districts are lagging; this project feeds into JJM targets [S1]
Cauvery, Krishna, Narmada & Sutlej-Yamuna Link disputes Comparative study of India's major inter-state water conflicts; contrast tribunal vs. negotiated outcomes
Western Yamuna Canal The existing canal whose surplus (post-24,000 cusec drawdown) triggers Rajasthan's transfer — understand its history [S2]
Groundwater Regulation in India (CGWB, Model Groundwater Bill) Shekhawati is in over-exploited zone; surface water augmentation's role in aquifer recovery [S4]
Cooperative Federalism: Constitutional Provisions (Articles 256–263) Inter-Governmental Council, Article 263 mechanisms — contrast with the Home Ministry-mediated model used here [S1]

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Wrong ministry as sole implementing agency: This agreement was brokered by the Ministry of Home Affairs (Amit Shah), though Jal Shakti is the technical ministry. Do not attribute it solely to Jal Shakti. [S1]

  2. Confusing Hathnikund Barrage with Tajewala: Historically the diversion point was "Tajewala Head" — Hathnikund Barrage replaced it in 1999. Both names appear in PIB documents; Hathnikund is the current operational headwork. [S2]

  3. Scope of Phase-1 water: The 577 MCM is not Rajasthan's total Yamuna allocation — it is only the monsoon-season (July–October) surplus after WYC's 24,000-cusec capacity is fully used. Year-round supply awaits dam construction. [S2]

  4. Beneficiary states confusion: Haryana's districts (Bhiwani, Fatehabad) are also beneficiaries — aspirants often assume only Rajasthan benefits. The project serves water-scarce western Haryana too. [S1]

  5. Treating this as a tribunal award: This is a negotiated executive agreement — it does not have the legal finality of an Inter-State Water Disputes Tribunal award under the 1956 Act. Aspirants must not conflate the two mechanisms. [S1][S3]


11. Sources