
Little for long term water management in Bengaluru
The Hindu
Bengaluru's water crisis in 2024 prompts short-term solutions, but long-term planning in 2025-26 budget remains inadequate.
Most Bengalureans will remember the summer of 2024 for the water crisis that followed a drought-hit 2023. This may have forced the civic authorities to implement water-saving measures earlier this year, but the 2025-26 budget offers little in terms of long-term planning to quench the city’s thirst that experts have been pressing for.
Chief Minister Siddaramaiah said the Cauvery Stage-V project with an additional water capacity of 775 MLD constructed at a cost of ₹5,550 crore was dedicated to the public in 2024-25 and “has provided a water lifeline to 50 lakh residents in 110 villages.”
“Under the Karnataka Water Security and Disaster Resilience Programme, actions will be undertaken during 2025-2031 at a total cost of ₹5,000 crore out of which ₹3,500 crore will be World Bank loan and ₹1,500 crore will be from the State government,” he said.
He has listed flood management system in Bruhat Bengaluru Mahanagara Palike (BBMP) areas at a cost of ₹2,000 crore, construction of waste water treatment plant and sewage pumping system by the Bangalore Water Supply and Sewerage Board (BWSSB) at a total cost of ₹1,070 crore, and 41 lake-filling works by the Minor Irrigation Department under the disaster mitigation programme in Bengaluru Rural at a cost of ₹250 crore.
Under grants from the State Disaster Mitigation Fund and the National Disaster Mitigation Fund, the rebuilding of stormwater drains and rejuvenation of lakes in the city at a cost of ₹239 crore has been announced. Ongoing works mentioned included 70 tank filling works under the Vrushabhavati Valley Stage-I, 24 tank filling works under H.N. Valley Stage -II and 18 tank filling works under Bengaluru East taluka.
Mr. Siddaramaiah also said that Karnataka “is at the forefront of vigorously recycling and purifying used water — a practice praised by international forums.”
However, experts are divided. Water conservationist S. Vishwanath said the water crisis is in pockets and the Cauvery Stage-V project will solve a part of the crisis, while the tank filling exercises will improve the water table.













