Cultural Survival

The Narmada Issue: An Overview

The Narmada Valley Project (NVP) is made up of plans for 30 major, 136 medium and 3,000 minor dams in India. In Sardar Sarovar Project (SSP) in the state of Gujarat and the Narmada Sagar Project (NSP) in the state of Madhya Pradesh are, at present, the NVP's major constituents. Estimates show that the cost of the whole project would be around US $19 billion over the next 25 years. The present estimate for the NSP and the SSP is US $3 billion and $9 billion, respectively.

The state governments of Gujarat and Madhya Pradesh claim that the SSP and the NSP would irrigate 1.9 million ha and 0.14 million ha of land and generate 1,450 megawatts (mw) and 1,000 mw of power, respectively. The hydroelectric power of the SSP would be shared by the states of Gujarat, Maharashtra and Madhya Pradesh; the irrigation benefits would accrue to the states of Gujarat and Rajasthan. All irrigation and power benefits of the NSP would go only to Madhya Pradesh. Without the NSP, the SSP would not be able to achieve its full irrigation and power potential - it needs regulated water supply from upstream.

These projects had been treading water for many years for want of environmental clearance from the Ministry of Environment and Forests. Recently, the Indian government gave clearance for the construction of the SSP in Gujarat and the NSP in Madhya Pradesh. But very few dispute the fact that the ecological impacts of these projects have not been properly studied.

Both environmentalists and social activists have raised serious questions about the projects. The studies done thus far have been found to be inadequate, or the follow-up actions to rectify the damages not up to the mark. The government of Gujarat commissioned a study of the projects carried out by the department of botany, M.S. University, Baroda, in just six months. The study did not take into consideration the seasonal temporal variations in the climate and many other important parameters. This study was commissioned only after the work on the project had begun. Moreover, much of the information in this study derives from government data, rather than from recent, independent, empirical data.

Similarly, the Environment Planning and Coordination Organization (EPCO), in Bhopal, carried out a study to assess the environmental impact of the NSP. This study is an almost worthless exercise; it is based on secondary data, which were at times found to be contradictory. Such a report can hardly be passed off as legitimate environmental research.

Other studies, conducted by Consulting Engineering Services Pvt. Ltd., in New Delhi, and the Indian Institute of Sciences, in Bangalore, can only be considered a piecemeal approach to the whole project, because they only examine one or two dams.

Submerging Forests and Agricultural Land

The Sardar Sarovar Project will submerge about 10,000 ha of forest land. The case of the Narmada Sagar Project is even worse: it will submerge 40,332 ha of forest land.

The forests to be submerged are basically teak, with excellent strands of bamboo and other woods. The only pure stand of anjun left in India is located in the Dewas district of Madhya Pradesh. Many of these species no longer naturally regenerate.

Although the Madhya Pradesh state policy guarantees that "for all forest areas submerged in the project, an equal area will be taken up under compensatory forestry," the same document also states that big chunks of land are not available in the districts close to the submergence area. The question then is: Where is all the land for afforestation going to come from?

An amount of US $238,000 has been allocated for the afforestation in Madhya Pradesh. A conservative estimate would allocate US $1,150 for replanting trees on one hectare of land, meaning that US $238,000 can be used to replant a mere 206 ha.

These projects will also flood a large amount of agricultural and grazing land. Most of the agricultural land, situated close to the river Narmada, is highly fertile and produces fine yields of wheat, jowar (barley) and cotton. The official document for the NSP says, "big chunks of cultivable land are not available in Khandwa, Khargone, Dhar, Jhabua, Dewas Hoshangabad and other districts...In these circumstances the only course left is to allot the affected families small bits of government land available in the nearby districts of the submergence area." This policy would lead to serious sociocultural disruption in the life of the area's residents. A report carried out by National Institute of Urban Affairs (NIUA), in New Delhi, mentions that adequate areas in every district would be available for the residents. However, the project authorities have made no serious attempt to find cultivable land for the residents.

Loss of Wildlife

The project report of the NSP states, "the impact of the project on the wildlife shall be nil. Since wildlife has got natural characteristics of shifting to nearby jungles wherever it is felt unsuitable to them." In other words, the wildlife will relocate itself. Similarly, the policy document prepared by the government of Madhya Pradesh says, "wildlife in submerged forests will be guided to adjacent localities. Protection of the wildlife will be the responsibility of the forest authorities." These statements not only contradict each other but also reflect the irresponsible attitude of the project authorities toward the fate of the area's wildlife, which consists of several rare and endangered species. To date, no one has taken an inventory of the species of plants and animals found in the forests; these studies have only just been commissioned.

Displacement and Rehabilitation

Both these projects will displace nearly 200,000 people from their homes. Officials sources state that, in the case of the SSP, 182 villages in Madhya Pradesh, 36 in Maharashtra and 19 in Gujarat will be under water, and the NSP will submerge an additional 254 villages in Madhya Pradesh. These figures, however, are incorrect, because they only include revenue villages, with no mention of forest villages. A recent field report by Multiple Action Research Group (MARG), a nongovernmental organization in New Delhi, mentions six forest villages of Tehsil Barwani (Dhar district, Madhya Pradesh) that will go under Sardar Sarovar's waters. Similarly, no attempt has been made to list those villages that will fall victim to the backwater effect.

Out of the more than 25,000 people affected by the SSP in Gujarat and Maharashtra, more than 90 percent of them are members of the Bhil and Tadavi tribes. Most of them are landless, and fall into two categories: traditional tribal cultivators with no land titles, and the real landless agricultural laborers found in many villages of Madhya Pradesh. For the forest-dwelling tribals, the most serious impact of displacement will be the separation from their natural surroundings. The forest and the river play central roles in their cultural and economic life; neither will be present at resettlement sites.

The families to be displaced by the SSP are to be rehabilitated through the directives of the Narmada Water Disputes Tribunal. Although these directives are a marked improvement on past rehabilitation polices, they contain serious loopholes and omissions. First, the policy applies only to those resettled from Madhya Pradesh and Maharashtra. Second, only those families from whom more than 25 percent of their land holdings are acquired will be entitled to irrigable land, with a minimum of two hectares. The directives contain no mention of any resettlement and rehabilitation of forest dwellers, who eke out a living on common property resources. Most of the potential oustees of Madhya Pradesh are not aware of any of these directives, and, according to MARG's report, the directives have been misquoted by project officials.

In the case of Maharashtra Gujarat, the initial phase of resettlement and rehabilitation has been far from satisfactory. According to activist Medha Patkar, the land-for-land policy has largely failed in the state of Maharashtra, and in Gujarat, the state government has not bothered to find adequate land for the residents. Many people in Gujarat have complained that the lands sold to them came with heavy debts. Many others received lands which the same SSP was about to acquire for the construction of canals. In many cases, the cash compensation has been inadequate. According to a news report, the lands acquired in the village of Panchmuli, in Gujarat, were to be compensated at the rate of US $438 per acre; the villagers received only US $354 per acre. The resettlement sites do not have adequate drinking water supplies. To date, civic amenities like electricity, schools and panachayat ghar (town halls) have not been provided in one resettlement village, Suka.

Waterlogging

Every year, a large portion of good, fertile land is rendered unproductive and barren by almost all the irrigation projects. The annual increase in soil salinity and waterlogging was as high as 50,999 ha and 27,000 in Ramganga project area in Uttar Pradesh. About 25 percent of the arable lands of Punjab and Haryana have been affected by waterlogging and soil salinity, too. The problem of waterlogging and soil salinity in the Narmada projects is expected to be serious because the command areas of the projects have largely black soils, which have very good water retention capacity. A study by Indian Institute of Science, in Bangalore, found that about 40 percent of the NSP's command area will become waterlogged unless stringent preventive measures are taken. Significantly, the cost of these measures does not figure in the original cost-benefit analysis for NSP-the analysis submitted for funding approval.

Catchment Area Treatment

There is no denying the fact that the catchment areas of the river Narmada are subject to heavy ecological degradation. If this is not properly checked, the increasing soil erosion will lead to salutation and sedimentation, thereby reducing the life span of the reservoirs. No comprehensive study has been commissioned on the existing state and future demands on the catchment forests in the Narmada Valley. However, an expert committee has looked into the matter for part of the area, and has suggested a US $38 million scheme to treat the catchment. As the Department of Environment report points out, however, this study was commissioned several years before the projects were sanctioned.

Cost-Benefit Analysis

A project is sanctioned by the planning commission only when the cost-benefit ratio is 1 to 1.5 - that is, for every rupee spent, there must be a return of at least Rs. 1.50. It has been found that this ratio is often distorted by exaggerating the benefits and underplaying the costs. Environmentalists have made the following points, among others, on the NSP and the SSP:

1. The costs of land acquisition have been underplayed.

2. The allocation of money for compensatory afforestation is inadequate and distorted. For the NSP, it is US $238,000 for afforestation of 40,332 ha. It is US $4 million for afforestation of 10,000 ha in the case of the SSP.

3. The value of the forest land has been calculated only in terms of commercial products. The analysis does not consider the loss of ecological benefits of forests.

4. The loss of wildlife is omitted from the cost-benefit analysis.

5. The cost of preventive measures for waterlogging is also omitted from the cost-benefit analysis.

6. Due to delays in the clearance of these projects, present costs of construction run much higher than anticipated.

Other Impacts

Environmentalists and social activists have anticipated many other negative impacts of these projects. Some of them are:

1. Seismicity - a hotly debated issue that seems to produce more confusion than clarity.

2. Contamination by pollution, pesticides and minerals.

3. Saltwater ingress at mouth of river due to reduced water flow.

4. Spread of waterborne diseases in the command area.

5. Impact on aquatic ecology.

On the basis of these serious inadequacies and distortions, we strongly demand that all the initial assumptions and ideas be reevaluated before pushing ahead with these projects.

The following steps should be taken to prove inadequacies and distortions in the existing assessments:

Independent Assessments:

Detailed sociological and anthropological studies on the existing sociocultural lifestyle of those to be relocated are desperately needed in order to assess the likely impact of the changes. Equally vital are studies on the environmental impacts of the projects. Independent cost-benefit analyses must be carried out to judge the feasibility and viability of these projects.

Public Awareness and Mass Media

The full utilization of communication techniques, including mass media, would help create widespread awareness and understanding of these issues. Exhibitions plays, film shows and publication of articles and books can bring awareness at many different levels.

Local People's Action

The people Maharashtra and Gujarat have been able to organized themselves to demand better rehabilitation with the help of Narmada Dharangrasht Samiti/SETU and Chattra Yuva Sangharsh Vahini. Little sign of this mobilization is evident among the people of Madhya Pradesh, however; out of the total 491 villages to be submerged (from the NSP and the SSP), 436 (more than 90 percent) are situated in Madhya Pradesh alone. Two local organizations in the state - Narmada Ghati Sangharsh Samiti, Harsude and Narmada Ghati Nav Nirman Samiti, Tavlai - are working in these areas, but the existing sociopolitical situation has not allowed these samitis (organizations) to organize the potential oustees.

Legislative Measures

Both the projects involve displacing nearly 200,000 people, many of whom make their livings from common property resources. There is no comprehensive resettlement and rehabilitation scheme for them in the directives and rules laid down thus far. A petition on behalf of these people can be filed under Article 21 of India's Constitution, which says, "no person shall be deprived of his life or personal liberty except according to procedure established by law." A position proving the inadequacies and distortions in the existing assessments can also be filed in the court.

Article copyright Cultural Survival, Inc.

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India’s Greatest Planned Environmental Disaster:

The Narmada Valley Dam Projects

www.sierraclub.org/human%2Drights/india/index.asp

“For over a century we’ve believed that Big Dams would deliver the people of India from hunger and poverty.  

The opposite has happened.” -    Arundhati Roy

The Narmada Valley Development Project is the single largest river development scheme in India.   It is one of the largest hydroelectric projects in the world and will displace approximately 1.5 million people from their land in three states (Gujarat, Maharashtra, and Madhya Pradesh).   The environmental costs of such a project, which involves the construction of more than 3,000 large and small dams, are immense.   The project will devastate human lives and biodiversity by inundating thousands of acres of forests and agricultural land.   “The State” (India) wants to build these dams on the Narmada River in the name of National Development.   But “How can you measure progress if you don’t know what it costs and who has paid for it?” (Roy 16).  

Each monsoon season thousands of people are told by the Indian government that they will have to be relocated as their ancestral lands are flooded out.   “The people whose lives were going to be devastated were neither informed nor consulted nor heard” (Roy 26).   A disproportionate number of those being displaced are tribal people: Adivasis and Dalits.

Damming the Narmada River will degrade the fertile agricultural soils due to continuous irrigation (rather the seasonal irrigation which is dependent on the monsoon), and salinization, making the soil toxic to many plant species.   The largest of the dams under construction is the Sardar Sarovar, which, if completed, will flood more than 37,000 hectares of forest and agricultural land, displacing more than half a million people and destroying some of India’s most fertile land.

The thing about multipurpose dams like the Sardar Sarovar is that their “purposes” (irrigation, power production, and flood control) conflict with one another.   Irrigation uses up the water you need to produce power.   Flood control requires you to keep the reservoir empty during the monsoon months to deal with an anticipated surfeit of water.   And if there’s no surfeit, you’re left with an empty dam.   And this defeats the purpose of irrigation, which is to store the monsoon water (Roy 34).

In the end, the Big Dam will produce only 3% of the power planners say it will – that’s only 50 megawatts!   Additionally, when you take into account the power needed to pump water through the network of canals inevitably attached to the dam, the Sardar Sarovar Project (SSP) will consume more electricity than it produces!   Another problem with the SSP is that its reservoir displaces people in Madhya Pradesh and Maharashtra, but its benefits go to Gujarat (Roy 34-35).   Even though the arid regions of that state, Kutch and Saurashtra, are not mentioned in the water-sharing award as recipients of drinking water.

The proposed dams will affect millions of people but only a certain percentage of them will be privy to the government’s resettlement and rehabilitation (R & R) programs.   The problem here arises in defining who are Project-Affected Persons (PAPs).   The World Commission on Dams urges that the “impact assessment includes all people in the reservoir, upstream, downstream and in catchment areas whose properties, livelihoods and nonmaterial resources are affected.   It also includes those affected by dam-related infrastructure such as canals, transmission lines and resettlement developments” ( www.irn.org/wcd/narmada.shtml ).   In reality, however, people affected by the extensive canal system are not considered as PAPs.   These people are subject to R & R packages, but not the same ones as those living in the reservoir area.   Unbelievably, those not entitled to any compensation at all are the hundreds of thousands whose lands or livelihoods are affected by either project-related developments or downstream impacts.

Back to Table of Contents

“Big Dams are to a nation’s ‘development’ what nuclear bombs are to its military arsenal.   They’re both weapons of mass destruction.”

-   Arundhati Roy

The Narmada River, on which the Indian government plans to build some 3,200 dams, flows through three states: Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra, and Gujarat.   Ninety percent of the river flows through Madhya Pradesh; it skirts the northern border of Maharashtra, then flows through Gujarat for about 180 kilometers before emptying into the Arabian Sea at Bharuch.

Plans for damming the river at Gora in Gujarat surfaced as early as 1946.   In fact, Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru laid the foundation for a 49.8-meter-high dam in 1961.   After studying the new maps the dam planners decided that a much larger dam would be more profitable.   The only problem was hammering out an agreement with neighboring states (Madhya Pradesh and Maharashtra).   In 1969, after years of negotiations attempting to agree on a feasible water-sharing formula, the Indian government established the Narmada Water Disputes Tribunal.   Ten years later, it announced its award.   “The Narmada Water Disputes Tribunal Award states that land should be made available to the oustees at least one year in advance before submergence” ( www.narmada.org/sardarsarovar.html ).  

Before the Ministry of the Environment even cleared the Narmada Valley Development Projects in 1987, the World Bank sanctioned a loan for $450 million for the largest dam, the Sardar Sarovar, in 1985.   In actuality, construction on the Sardar Sarovar dam site had continued sporadically since 1961, but began in earnest in 1988.   Questions arose concerning the promises about resettlement and rehabilitation programs set up by the government, so by 1986 each state had a people’s organization that addressed these concerns.   Soon, these groups came together to form the Narmada Bachao Andolan (NBA), or, the Save the Narmada Movement.

In 1988, the NBA formally called for all work on the Narmada Valley Development Projects to be stopped.   In September 1989, more than 50,000 people gathered in the valley from all over India to pledge to fight “destructive development.”   A year later thousands of villagers walked and boated to a small town in Madhya Pradesh to reiterate their pledge to drown rather than agree to move from their homes.   Under intense pressure, the World Bank was forced to create an independent review committee, the Morse Commission, which published the Morse Report (a.k.a. Independent Review) in 1992.   The report “endorsed all the main concerns raised by the Andolan [NBA]” ( www.narmada.org/sardarsarovar.html ).   In author Arundhati Roy’s opinion “It is the most balanced, unbiased, yet damning indictment of the relationship between the Indian State and the World Bank.”   Two months later, the Bank sent out the Pamela Cox Committee.   It suggested exactly what the Morse Report advised against: “a sort of patchwork remedy to try and salvage the operation” (Roy 45-46).   Eventually, due to the international uproar created by the Report, the Bank withdrew from the Sardar Sarovar Project.   In response, the Gujarati government decided to raise $200 million and push ahead with the project.

While the Independent Review was being written and also after it was published confrontations between villagers and authorities continued in the valley.   After continued protests by the NBA the government charged yet another committee, the Five Member Group (FMG), to review the SSP.   The FMG’s report endorsed the Morse Report’s concerns but it made no difference.   Following a writ petition by the NBA in 1994 calling for a comprehensive review of the project, the Supreme Court of India stopped construction of the Sardar Sarovar dam in 1995.   Tension in the area dissipated but soon the NBA’s attention shifted to two other Big Dams in Madhya Pradesh – the Narmada Sagar and the Maheshwar.   Though these dams were nowhere near their projected heights their impacts on the environment and the people of the valley were already apparent.   The government’s resettlement program for the displaced natives “continues to be one of callousness and broken promises” (Roy 51).   In 1999, however, the Supreme Court allowed for the dam’s height to be raised to 88 meters (from 80 meters when building was halted in 1995).   In October 2000, the Supreme Court issued a judgement to allow immediate construction of the Sardar Sarovar Dam to 90 meters.   In addition, it allowed for the dam to be built up to its originally planned height of 138 meters.   These decrees have “come from the Court despite major unresolved issues on resettlement, the environment, and the project’s costs and benefits” ( www.narmada.org/sardarsarovar.html ).

“Nobody builds Big Dams to provide drinking water to rural people.  

Nobody can afford to.”

Native people

Dalits are the “Untouchables” of the caste system.   Translated literally the Dalits are the “oppressed” or “ground-down.”

Adivasi is the term used to designate the original inhabitants (indigenous people) of a region.

The government of India supports the building of over 3,000 dams on the Narmada River.   What the State fails to take into account are the infinite costs of what it terms National Development; the millions of lives affected by the devastating environmental impacts of building dams.

Narmada Bachao Andolan, The Save the Narmada Movement

The NBA is a people’s movement formed from local people’s movements in Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra, and Gujarat.   Through peaceful means, the NBA has brought much media attention to the plight of the native people along the river.   Medha Patkar is a prominent leader of the group.

The World Bank had originally supported the Sardar Sarovar with a $450 million loan.   However, after appointing an independent panel to review the impacts of the project the Bank withdrew support.   The panel expressed much concern that the environmental and social impacts of the project had not been properly considered.

The Supreme Court

The Court is one of the most formidable opponents of the NBA.   It has exercised its power over the people through judgements to continue with building of dams along the river, disregarding concerns about the dams’ environmental and social impacts.

Demographics

“Every aspect of the project is approached in this almost playful manner, as if it’s a family board game.  

Even when it concerns the lives and futures of vast numbers of people.” - Arundhati Roy

In a country where 200 million people (one-fifth of the population) do not have safe drinking water, 600 million (two-thirds of the population) lack basic sanitation, and 350 million (two-fifths of the population) live below the poverty line, it is no wonder that the government of India wants to implement projects that could potentially improve the lives of the people.   Unfortunately, the State chose a method that has and will likely cause more harm than good.   According to the government, the Narmada Valley Dam Projects will provide water to 20 to 40 million people, irrigate 1.8 to 1.9 million hectares of land, and produce 1450 megawatts of power.   The Narmada Bachao Andolan and other organizations believe otherwise.   They believe these claims are greatly exaggerated.   These groups estimate 1.5 million people (about 10,000 families) will be displaced in the three states of Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra, and Gujarat.

A disproportionate number of oustees are indigenous people.   Eight percent of India’s population are Adivasis and fifteen percent are Dalits but an incredible sixty percent of those displaced by the dam projects are Adivasis and Dalits (Roy 18).

                         

“This July will bring the last monsoon of the twentieth century.   The ragged army in the Narmada valley has declared that it will not move when the waters of the Sardar Sarovar reservoir rise to claim its lands and homes.” - Arundhati Roy

http://www.goldmanprize.org/search/search.html

With activist Medha Patkar to lead them, the Narmada Bachao Andolan began mobilizing massive marches and rallies against the Narmada Valley Development Project, and especially the largest, the Sardar Sarovar, in 1985.   Although the protests were peaceful, Patkar and others were often beaten and arrested by police.   Following the formation of the NBA in 1986, fifty thousand people gathered in the valley from all over India to pledge to fight “destructive development” in 1989.   In 1990, thousands of villagers made their way by boat and foot to a small town in Madhya Pradesh in defense of their pledge to drown in the reservoir waters rather than move from their homes.   Later that year on Christmas day an army of six thousand men and women accompanied a seven-member sacrificial squad in walking more than a hundred kilometers.   The sacrificial squad had resolved to lay down its lives for the river.   A little over a week later the squad announced an indefinite hunger strike.   This was the first of three fasts and lasted twenty-two days.   It almost killed Ms. Patkar, along with many others.  

The NBA has also taken a more diplomatic approach to getting through to the government.   They have submitted written representations (complaints) to government officials such as the Grievance Redressal Committee, the Sardar Sarovar Narmada Nigam, the President, and the Minister of Social Justice and Environment Maneka Gandhi.   More often than not, their voice goes unheard and unacknowledged.

http://www.irn.org/

“No one has ever managed to make the World Bank step back from a project before.   Least of all a ragtag army of the

poorest people in one of the world’s poorest countries.” -    Arundhati Roy

The demonstrations, protests, rallies, hunger strikes, blockades, and written representations by Narmada Bachao Andolan have all made an impact on the direction of the movement to stop the building of large and small dams along the Narmada.   Media attention from these events has taken the issues from a local level to a more national scale.   The NBA was an integral force in forcing the World Bank to withdraw its loan from the projects by pressuring the Bank with negative media attention.

Recommendations

“Big Dams are obsolete…They lay the earth to waste.   They cause floods, waterlogging, salinity; they spread disease.  

There is mounting evidence that links Big Dams to earthquakes.” -    Arundhati Roy

Reassessing the environmental and social impacts of the more than 3,000 dams slated for construction should be the first step the Indian government takes in solving the country’s water management problems.   It should then observe the recommendations proposed by those assessments, rather than ignoring them.

The country and the individual states could also consider cheaper and more effective energy options that do in fact already exist.   In fact, “A task force set up by the Madhya Pradesh state government suggested alternatives such as demand management measures, biomass generation, optimum use of oil-based plants and existing dams, and micro-hydro plants” ( www.irn.org/wcd/narmada.shtml ).

According to renowned irrigation expert K. R. Datye, a comprehensive review of the yield of the land, taking into account the water, energy, and biomass availability is required.   Datye highlights the need for regenerative water use for agriculture, using local water resources.   Water from outside (i.e. dams) is used to restore vegetative cover to degraded land and to recharge ground water aquifers that are badly depleted, to a point where water and energy balance can be maintained ( www.narmada.org/sardar-sarovar/ecotimes.alternatives.html ).

The following watershed management strategies are traditional practices that have been revived by local communities in the states of Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra, and Gujarat with the help of Non-Governmental Organizations and state government programs.

Alwar District, Rajasthan

BanniGrasslands

Kutch Dist., Gujarat

Jhabua District, Madhya Pradesh

Thunthi Kankasiya & Mahudi, Dahod Dist.

Surendranagar District

Devgadh, Junagadh District

http://www.narmada.org/ALTERNATIVES/index.html

Alternatives to dams do exist and should be considered seriously.

“India: Peaceful Demonstrators Against the Narmada Dam Project Arrested, Beaten, and Intimidated by Police.”   The Sierra Club: Human Rights Campaigns.   1999.

< http://www.sierraclub.org/human%2Drights/india/index.asp >

“Medha Patkar.”   The Goldman Environmental Prize.   1992.

< http://www.goldmanprize.org/search/search.html >

Narmada River page.   International Rivers Network.   1996-2000.

< http://irn.org/programs/narmada/map.html >

Roy, Arundhati.   The Cost of Living .   New York: Random House, Inc.   1999.

“The Sardar Sarovar: A Brief Introduction.”   Friends of the River Narmada.   2000.

< http://narmada.org/sardarsarovar.html >

Shruti Mukthyar .   “ Alternatives.”   Friends of the River Narmada.   U of Wisconsin-Madison: Institute for Environmental Studies.   2000.  

< http://narmada.org/ALTERNATIVES/index.html >

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Main page content

Sardar sarovar dam conflict in india.

The Sardar Sarovar Dam, constructed on the sacred Narmada River, aims to secure power, as well as irrigation and drinking water, for the drought-prone region. However, the project has also had significant environmental impacts and has displaced large proportions of the population, especially poor farmers and ethnic and Adivasis, the aboriginal population of India. Indeed, this situation catalysed one of the major environmental protest movements in India.

  • Agricultural/Pastoral land

Conceptual Model

Conflict history.

The Sardar Sarovar Dam is one of the biggest dams built within the framework of the Narmada River Development project which started in 1979 thanks to the award of the Narmada Water Disputes Tribunal (NWDT – see  Narmada Dam Water Dispute between Indian States ). However, from 1985 onward, civil discontent began to rise, coming from citizens, academics, international and national NGOs and medias who denounced several infringements of environmental and human rights standards ( Narula, 2008 ). Different groups of non-violent activists merged in 1989, giving birth to the Narmada Bachao Andolan, which has been leading the protest since then and opposing the governments of Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra and Gujarat, as well as the government of India, which were all supporters of the project.

A development project causes public outcry

From the outset, governments and dam builders advocated the development aspect of the project which aimed at providing power as well as irrigation and drinking water in a drought prone region ( Ellison, 2005 ). Whilst the World Bank had agreed to support the project in 1985, political protest mainly voiced by the Narmada Bachao Andolan grew by peaceful means. This non-violent protest was inspired, among other, by the Gandhian ideology ( Vinay Lal, 2000 ;  Kalland & Persoon, 1998 ).

The World Bank's withdrawal

This led the President of the Bank to form an independent commission in 1991, in order to reassess its position. The Independent Review, also called Morse Report, which followed firmly condemned the lack of a proper resettlement and rehabilitation plan (R&R) as well as the inadequate evaluation of the environmental damages involved ( Morse Report 1992 ), while highlighting the lack of data and consultation with the people concerned. The World Bank consequently withdrew its support for the project.

Environmental impact

The building of the dam has entailed massive flooding of villages and productive land. This has brought about extensive environmental consequences, such as a negative effect on downstream fishing, threat on wildlife natural habitat, waterlogging and salinization of water, silting of the river bed, deforestation ( Morse Report 1992 ;  Kothari & Ram, 1994 ). For populations whose livelihood entirely relies on agriculture, an ecological disaster, such as this, also has economic impacts by damaging their mean of subsistence. The net benefits of the dam itself are thus questioned. Further it has been argued that climate change could worsen the situation.

Social repercussions

The displacement of small farmers and tribal groups without a proper financial compensation, if any, has been at the heart of the conflict. The governments of Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra and Gujarat are still responsible for massive violation of the right to life, livelihood and rehabilitation of thousands of families ( Indian Independent People’s Tribunal, 2010 ). Although the public protest managed to publicize the conflict at an international stage in the 1990s, the Sardar Sarovar Dam has been built and several raises in its final height have been agreed to, expanding the scope of the submerged zone and thus worsening the environmental and social impact of the project.

Conflict resolution

Although the nonviolent protest of the Narmada Bachao Andolan led to the withdrawal of the World Bank in 1993, neither the government of India nor the state governments stopped the project. The Narmada Bachao Andolan thus brought the case to the Supreme Court of India in 1995. The latter decided to suspend the construction of the dam because of the lack of prior assessment of the project’s environmental and social impacts.

Unaddressed grievances

The government of Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra and Gujarat consequently established a Grievance Redressal Authority which aimed at dealing with the resettlement and rehabilitation complaints of those displaced. The Supreme Court’s next rulings (1999, 2000) permitted the construction of the Sardar Sarovar Dam, thus leaving the grievances unaddressed. The lack of involvement of civil society and especially of those displaced in the decision-making process has been much criticized and may be responsible for the failure of the conflict resolution efforts. As the decision-making process still excludes the different social movements and citizens, the dam’s construction has not been held and thousands of families remain left without any compensation.

Governments disregard their obligations

There is yet rehabilitation and resettlement requirement laid down in the award given by the NWDT in 1979 as well as in the Supreme Court rulings. Those requirements foresaw that the states of Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra and Gujarat would have to compensate those displaced, but the concerned government still do not comply with their obligations towards the displaced populations ( Indian Independent People’s Tribunal, 2010 ).

No accountability to the international community

Besides, the World Bank’s withdrawal from the project somehow removed the international attention from the conflict, and certainly released India from its accountability duties towards the international community ( Narula, 2008 ). Indeed, after the scandal following the Morse Report which constituted a “historical watershed for the World Bank" and an important landmark in the struggle for accountability ( Sureda, 2003 ), the World Bank did not leave the project but set up conditions to its participation ( Kirk, 2011 ). It withdrew at the request of the Government of India, which allowed the latter to avoid increasing its social and environmental standards.

Prestige dimension

An important factor of the conflict resolution’s failure is the political context in which the project was drafted and decided. Its rhetoric and legal framework date back to the direct aftermath of India’s independence, when an ambitious modernization agenda was established ( Aquapedia, 2015 ). The Sardar Sarovar Dam is thus also about prestige and development, a theme explored in more detail in the  Narmada Dam Water Dispute between Indian States .

Resilience and Peace Building

Mediation & arbitration.

The Supreme Court of India decided to suspend the construction of the dam in 1995 because of the lack of a prior assessment of the project’s environmental and social impacts. After the involved regional governments established a Grievances Redressal Authority to deal with the resettlement and rehabilitation of those displaced, the Supreme Court permitted the construction of the dam. However, the grievances of the displaced population were ultimately left unaddressed.

Social inclusion & empowerment

The involvement of different social movements and citizens in the decision making process of the project is key for a satisfactory resolution of the conflict.

Resources and Materials

  • Kothari, A., Ram, R.N. (1994). Environmental Impacts of the Sardar Sarovar Project
  • Sardar Sarovar: The Report of the Independent Review, 1992
  • Jason A. Kirk, J.A. (2011). India and the World Bank, the Politics of Aid and Influence. Anthem Press
  • Narula, S. (2008). The Story of Narmada Bachao Andolan: Human Rights in the Global Economy and the struggle against the World Bank. New York University Public Law and Legal Theory Working Papers. Paper 106
  • Kalland, A., Persoon, G. (1998) Environmental Movements in Asia. Nordic Institute of Asian Studies, Man and Nature in Asia Series, No.4
  • Lal, V. (2000). Gandhi and the Ecological Vision of Life: Thinking beyond Deep Ecology
  • Sureda, A.R. (2003) Informality and Effectiveness in the Operation of the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development. Journal of International Economic Law, Oxford University Press
  • Conflicts over development in India's Narmada River Basin, 2015
  • Talib N. Ellison, The Sardar Sarovar Dam and Ethnic Conflict in India, 2005
  • Indian Independant People's Tribunal, Report on Sardar Sarovar Project, Canals of Indira Sagar & Omkareshwar and Jobat Dam Project, 2010
  • IAS Preparation
  • Current Affairs

Sardar Sarovar Dam - SSD

The project Sardar Sarovar Dam is inaugurated by PM Narendra Modi. SSD is located in the state of Gujarat on the Narmada river and is the largest dam in the Narmada Valley Project. The foundation stone of Sardar Sarovar Dam was laid out by the former Prime Minister Pt. Jawaharlal Nehru in 1961. 

The article aims to upkeep candidates preparing for various competitive exams about the Sardar Sarovar Dam, the background of the project Sardar Sarovar and the associated key facts.

SSD – Why in the News?

The Sardar Sarovar Dam has been in news recently because PM Modi has launched Seaplane Services from Sabarmati riverfront to Statue of Unity, which is on the SSD.

Hence, the facts related to Sardar Sarovar Dam are relevant for the IAS exam point of view.

Aspirants preparing for various Government exams must also carefully go through the information on Sardar Sarovar Dam as it is an important topic and can be asked in the General awareness section of the exams. 

Sardar Sarovar Project – SSP Background

  • The Sardar Sarovar Project was the brainchild of Sardar Vallabh Bhai Patel (India’s first deputy Prime Minister) in the view to arrest the excess flow of water from Narmada river to the Arabian sea. 

Aspirants can read the biography, and contributions of Sardar Vallabh Patel on the linked page. 

  • Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru had laid the foundation stone for the project in 1961. However, the construction of the project was started only in 1987. For information regarding Pt. Jawaharlal Nehru , visit the link provided here.
  • The Supreme Court stalled the project in 1995 as the project was a controversial one because many people objected to the construction of the dam citing environmental issues and the displacement of people. 

Aspirants can also know about various Inter-state water disputes in India on the linked page.

  • The Narmada Bachao Andolan was formed in order to protest against the project.
  • In 2000- 2001 the project was revived but with a lower height of 110.64 metres under directions from the SC, which was later increased in 2006 to 121.92 meters.
  • The Project was executed by Gujarat Government’s Sardar Sarovar Narmada Nigam Limited – SSNL.

Aspirants preparing for various competitive exams can go through the other related links given below-

  About Sardar Sarovar Dam

  • Sardar Sarovar Project is a concrete gravity dam on the Narmada river in Kevadiya near Navagam, Gujarat.
  • It is the second-largest concrete dam in the world in terms of the volume of concrete used to construct the dam (after the Grand Coulee Dam in the United States).
  • It involves a series of large irrigation and hydroelectric multi-purpose dams.
  • The irrigation benefits accrue to the states of Rajasthan and Gujarat while the hydroelectric power of the SSP is to be shared by the states of Gujarat, Madhya Pradesh and Maharashtra. Maharashtra is to get around 57 percent of the electricity produced; Madhya Pradesh will get around 27 percent and Gujarat around 16 percent.
  • It was funded by the World Bank through its International Bank for Reconstruction and Development (IBRD), although it withdrew in 1994.
  • It is a part of the Narmada Valley Project, a large hydraulic engineering project involving the construction of a series of large irrigation and hydroelectric multi-purpose dams on the Narmada river.

Go through the important information and the list of hydroelectric power plants in India on the linked page. 

  • The Sardar Sarovar Project includes two powerhouses, the River Bed Power House – RBPH with an installed capacity of 1,200 MegaWatt and the Canal Head Power House with 250 MegaWatt).
  • The Narmada Control Authority decided on 17 June 2017 to raise the height of the Sardar Sarovar Dam to its fullest height 163 meter (depth) by ordering the closure of 30 Gates.  
  • It is the third-highest concrete dam in India with 138.68 metres height.
  • The Sardar Sarovar Project was inaugurated in September 2017 by Prime Minister Modi.

Sardar Sarovar Dam – SSD Key Facts

Name of the Project Sardar Sarovar Project
Type of Dam Gravity dam 
Inaugurated on September 17 2017
Inaugurated by Prime Minister Narendra Modi
Height of the Dam (normal elevation) 138.68 metres
Depth of Sardar Sarovar Dam 163 metres approximately
Length of the Dam 1210 metres (3970 ft)
Construction Cost of SSP 25 Billion INR
Construction started 1987
Vision of SSD was Sardar Vallabh Bhai Patel
Foundation by Jawahar Lal Nehru

These facts would come in handy while preparing Current Affairs for different competitive exams. 

Aspirants preparing for various government exams can follow the links given below for assistance in their preparation.

  • Free Online Quiz for Government Exams
  • Government Exams Free Mock Test Series
  • Government Exam Previous Year Question Papers with Solution PDFs

Sardar Sarovar Dam – Benefits of the Project

  • Unused Water from Narmada river, which would otherwise flow into the sea, is used for serving many dry towns, villages and districts of Gujarat.
  • The project employed about one million people starting from the start to the end of the Sardar Sarovar project.
  • Provided electricity to the unserved regions and also to the farmers.
  • Provided water for irrigation and for drinking purposes.
  • Around 800,000 hectares of land in Gujarat and approx 2,46,000 hectares of land in Rajasthan are irrigated by the water of SSD. It is said that it provides drinking water to 131 towns and cities and around 9,633 villages in the four states, mostly the drought-prone areas of Kutch and Saurashtra.
  • Provided flood protection to an area of about 30,000 hectares which is prone to the fury of floods.
  • Wildlife sanctuaries will also be benefited

Other related links

Candidates preparing for the UPSC exam can check the links given below –

  • UPSC Calendar 2023
  • UPSC Syllabus
  • NCERT Notes: Geography Notes For UPSC 2023

UPSC 2023

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Implementing the report of the World Commission on Dams: A case study of the Narmada Valley in India

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2000, Am. U. Int'l L. Rev.

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Although three quarters of the globe is covered with water, there is a crisis for fresh water. In the next two decades many countries might fail to provide safe drinking water to their citizens if there is no cooperative and systematic effort. The best way out would be to store and utilize the runoff in the rainy season. Large dams have been found to be popular for this purpose. While these are useful for flood control, irrigation, navigation, power generation followed by ancillary secondary and tertiary benefits, these also cause untold human miseries. However, large dam construction would be an ongoing phenomenon across the world and more so in the era of globalization as many professionals and politicians tend to believe in mega projects supported by a powerful lobby. In this paper we examine the case of the Hirakud dam, the longest earthen dam in the world, built in Sambalpur district, Orissa, India in the light of a duality in human geography-determinism vs. possibilism-and a neo-Marxist stand point of centre-periphery approach. We find that river Mahanadi has been tamed temporarily in the name of developmental initiative in western Orissa but the political agenda was to save the eastern coastal plain and especially Cuttack city from the ravage of flood. The construction of the dam; the subsequent human sufferings, of the dam oustees and the affected population of about 22,000 households; and the recent concentration of important mile posts of Orissa in the coastal plains have accentuated the long standing cultural differences between the periphery and the centre, the hills and the plains, the silent and the vocal, the simple and the clever. Mindless mining and installation of so many extracting polluting industries and power plants in the districts of Sambalpur, Kalahandi and Sundergarh and the subsequent demand on the Hirakud reservoir and pollution of river Mahanadi led to simmering discontent in western Orissa. Resistance movement before the construction of the Hirakud dam was crushed by the political strategy of divide and rule and the overarching image of the Congress in the early years of Independence. Recent outcry in the form of Western Orissa Liberation Front and Kosala Rajya has resulted in Western Orissa Development Council to take up the problems of western Orissa. While some people in the command area have prospered, the oustees and the affected persons of the Hirakud dam still live under the stigma of reservoir oustees (budi anchalar loka); feel that the coastal people have been the cause of their sufferings and cherish the desire of going back to their homeland in the event of breach of the dam. Let us be careful of the sound of the distant drum!

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The Narmada Valley Development Project: A Never-Ending Controversy

The Narmada Valley Development Project is a multi-purpose river valley development project in India

Narmada Valley Development Project

The Narmada Valley Development Project is a multi-purpose river valley development project in India, aimed at creating a network of dams, canals, and reservoirs in the Narmada River basin. However, the project has been the subject of controversy for decades due to its potential social and environmental impacts.

Plan of Water Resources schemes in the narmada Basin

Background and History of the Project

The Narmada Valley Development Project was first proposed in the 1940s to harness the hydroelectric potential of the Narmada River. In 1961, the Central Water Commission prepared a plan for the project. In 1971, the project was revised. The project aims to generate electricity, provide irrigation, and supply water for domestic and industrial purposes for the state of Madhya Pradesh, Gujarat, Rajasthan and Maharashtra.

Controversies and Concerns

The project has been the subject of controversy for decades due to its potential social and environmental impacts. The following are the major controversies and concerns associated with the Narmada Valley Development Project:

  • Displacement of People: The project involves the construction of large dams and reservoirs, which will lead to the displacement of thousands of people from their homes and land. Many of these people belong to indigenous communities and have lived in the area for generations.
  • Environmental Impacts: The project will have significant environmental impacts, including the loss of forests and wildlife habitats. The construction of dams and reservoirs will also disrupt the natural flow of the river and affect fish populations.
  • Cultural Heritage: The project will also affect the cultural heritage of the people living in the area, including the destruction of historical and archaeological sites.
  • Human Rights Violations: The displacement of people from their homes and land without adequate compensation or resettlement violates their human rights.
  • Economic Viability: The project has also been criticized for its economic viability, with some experts arguing that the costs of the project outweigh its benefits.

The Narmada Valley Development Project

Protests and Opposition to the Project

The Narmada Valley Development Project has faced significant opposition from environmentalists, human rights activists, and local communities. The following are some of the major protests and opposition to the project:

  • Narmada Bachao Andolan: The Narmada Bachao Andolan (Save Narmada Movement) is a social movement led by environmentalist Medha Patkar to protest the construction of large dams on the Narmada River. The movement has gained international attention and has been supported by many prominent activists, including Arundhati Roy.
  • Court Cases: The project has also been the subject of several court cases, with many legal challenges raised against it. In 2000, the Supreme Court of India ruled that construction on the dam could proceed but with certain conditions.
  • International Opposition: The project has also faced international opposition, with many international organizations and activists criticizing its social and environmental impacts.

The Narmada Valley Development Project has been a never-ending controversy for decades, with concerns over its social and environmental impacts. While the project aims to provide economic development and infrastructure, its potential negative impacts on indigenous communities, the environment, and cultural heritage cannot be ignored. Hence, the government must address these concerns. Furthermore, ensure that the project is implemented in a sustainable and socially responsible manner.

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  • The 3rd Narmada Bridge Project Study

Viranjkumar Patel

National Highway (NH)-8-India, connects two major cities Delhi and Mumbai via many other important cities in its alignment including Surat, Vadodara, Ahmedabad, Udaipur, and Jaipur. Route considered as one of the busiest national highways across the country. In 2012-13, heavy traffic conjunction issues are being encountered on this NH-8 due to the distress of existing Sardar Bridge on Narmada River at Bharuch. Prior to that, the two well-functioning bridges, old Sardar Bridge and 2nd Narmada constructed by L&T earlier are serving the traffic. NHAI (National Highway Authority of India) has taken responsibility to assure smooth transportation on this highway. As per requirement, NHAI has initiated another 4-lane bridge over river Narmada. For this bridge, L&T proposed Extradosed bridge design keeping the aesthetics and economy as a priority and won the contract from NHAI.  Whole Project is considered as a case study to understand the life cycle of the project and phases of the project. Here are some glims of the implementation phase, particularly the construction methodology is described. The entire work has explored from NHAI and L&T records study and presented in student perspective., 

narmada project case study

Introduction to the Project

narmada project case study

Bridge Span Construction

narmada project case study

Lower Pylon Construction

narmada project case study

Diaphragm Construction

narmada project case study

Upper Pylon Construction

narmada project case study

Monitoring System-1

narmada project case study

Monitoring System-2

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Equipment Management

narmada project case study

Excavator-As a part of Equipment Management

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Design Flood Estimation for Narmada Sagar Project Using Partial Duration Series - A Case Study

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This paper highlights details of a study for estimation of flood magnitudes of different return periods for Narmada Sagar dam(India) using the partial duration series. The comparison of the efficiencies of annual and partial flood series has been given on the basis of exact theoretical approach and approximate theoretical approach. On the basis of exact theoretical approach it is seen that the partial flood series estimate of T year flood Q(T) (for any value of λ) always has a smaller sampling variance than that of the annual flood series for a return period T less than 11 years. For any return period the partial flood series estimate of Q(T) has a smaller sampling variance than annual flood series if the average number of peaks per year(λ) is at least 1.65. On the basis of approximate theoretical approach, it is observed that in the range of λ studied (1.0 to 2.437) the sampling variance of annual flood series is smaller than that of partial flood series.

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Goel, N.K., Seth, S.M., Chandra, S. (1987). Design Flood Estimation for Narmada Sagar Project Using Partial Duration Series - A Case Study. In: Singh, V.P. (eds) Application of Frequency and Risk in Water Resources. Springer, Dordrecht. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-94-009-3955-4_9

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COMMENTS

  1. Case Study: Narmada Dams Controversy

    Oct. 1972. Feb. 1974. Aug. 1979. Dec State of Gujarat formally complains to the Union Government about the Narmada waters dispute and invokes the Inter-State Water Disputes Act 1956 to request establishment of a Water Disputes Tribunal. Indian government establishes the Narmada Water Disputes Tribunal.

  2. The Narmada Issue: An Overview

    The Narmada Valley Project (NVP) is made up of plans for 30 major, 136 medium and 3,000 minor dams in India. ... The case of the Narmada Sagar Project is even worse: it will submerge 40,332 ha of forest land. ... A study by Indian Institute of Science, in Bangalore, found that about 40 percent of the NSP's command area will become waterlogged ...

  3. A case study of the Narmada River system in India with particular

    N. Singh (2017) A case study of the Narmada River system in India with particular reference to the impact of dams on its ecology and fisheries, Aquatic Ecosystem Health & Management, 20:1-2, 151-159

  4. The Narmada Valley Dam Projects

    The Narmada Valley Development Project is the single largest river development scheme in India. It is one of the largest hydroelectric projects in the world and will displace approximately 1.5 million people from their land in three states (Gujarat, Maharashtra, and Madhya Pradesh). The environmental costs of such a project, which involves the ...

  5. Case Study: Narmada Dams Controversy

    Osman Sabri Kiratli. 2010. This case study looks at one of the more famous instances of transnational involvement in stakeholder struggles over large dams: the long-running contention over dam construction on the Narmada Rover in India. Though proposals to build large dams on the Narmada inspired political controversy from the day the first ...

  6. Narmada Dam Water Disputes between Indian States

    The Narmada River is one of the largest rivers in the Indian subcontinent. Following Indian independence in 1947, the Government of India proposed numerous damming projects with the principle aim of providing irrigation, drinking water and power for its increasing population. The implementation of the proposed project was considerably hindered, however, by interstate disputes concerning the ...

  7. Sardar Sarovar Dam Conflict in India

    The Sardar Sarovar Dam is one of the biggest dams built within the framework of the Narmada River Development project which started in 1979 thanks to the award of the Narmada Water Disputes Tribunal (NWDT - see Narmada Dam Water Dispute between Indian States).However, from 1985 onward, civil discontent began to rise, coming from citizens, academics, international and national NGOs and medias ...

  8. Sardar Sarovar Dam (SSD)| Sardar Sarovar Project (SSP)

    The Narmada Control Authority decided on 17 June 2017 to raise the height of the Sardar Sarovar Dam to its fullest height 163 meter (depth) by ordering the closure of 30 Gates. It is the third-highest concrete dam in India with 138.68 metres height. The Sardar Sarovar Project was inaugurated in September 2017 by Prime Minister Modi.

  9. A case study of the Narmada River system in India with particular

    The Narmada River, synonymous with the goddess Narmada Mai, has immense aesthetic and religious significance to Indians, especially the people of the central and western regions. ... A case study of the Narmada River system in India with particular reference to the impact of dams on its ecology and fisheries. Utpal Bhaumik Central Inland ...

  10. Case study of Narmada main canal based drinking water supply project

    drinking water supply project: issues and challenges. S. M. Yadav & K. A. Chauhan. Department of Civil Engineering, S.V.NIT, Surat, Gujarat, India. Abstract. A concrete gravity dam, 1210 met ers ...

  11. The Narmada Valley Project

    View PDF. Nathalie Moreira-Ramirez Professor Friedman INTD 360-01 4/08/2014 The Narmada Valley Project Former Prime Minister of India Jawaharlal Nehru "proclaimed dams the temples of modern India" (D'Souza, xv). If dams are the modern temples of India then these temples are by no means as alluring and timeless as the old temples of India.

  12. Implementing the report of the World Commission on Dams: A case study

    The study found sixteen sites in the Narmada basin with the potential of generating hydroelectric power. Project reports for a few major projects (Broach project in Gujarat and Narmada Sagar (Indira Sagar), Bargi, and Harinphal projects in Madhya Pradesh) were prepared during the period of 1959-1965.

  13. The Narmada Valley Development Project: A Never-Ending Controversy

    The Narmada Valley Development Project is a multi-purpose river valley development project in India, aimed at creating a network of dams, canals, and reservoirs in the Narmada River basin. However, the project has been the subject of controversy for decades due to its potential social and environmental impacts.. Plan of Water Resources schemes in the narmada Basin | Photo: Nvvchar/Wikimedia ...

  14. A short history of the Sardar Sarovar Dam on river Narmada

    The Sardar Sarovar project was a vision of the first deputy prime minister of India, Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel. The foundation stone of the project was laid out by Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru on April 5, 1961. Having a length of 1.2 kms and a depth of 163 metres, the Sardar Sarovar Dam is expected to be shared among the three states of Madhya ...

  15. River Basin Management: A Case Study of Narmada Valley Development with

    River Basin Management: A Case Study of Narmada Valley Development with Special Reference to the Sardar Sarovar Project in Gujarat, India. Rajiv K. Gupta. Pages 55-78 ... This paper focuses on the Sardar Sarovar Project on the river Narmada and highlights its rehabilitation, environmental and social aspects, and concludes that the project is a ...

  16. Dams construction on the Narmada River, India

    The project is composed of 3,000 small, 135 medium and 30 large dams. Out of them, the Sardar Sarovar Project (SSP), the Indira Sagar Project (ISP) and the Maheshwar Dam are mega dams. The first is 138 meters high and generating an electrical capacity of 1,450 MW, would irrigate more than 1.8 million hectares.The third one should provide 400 MW ...

  17. (PDF) Environmental Aspects of the Narmada Valley Project

    This was admitted in the study reports themselves. In the case of SSP, the . ... M.S. University, "The Sardar Sarovar Narmada Project Studies on Ecology and . Environment", Narmada Planning ...

  18. The 3rd Narmada Bridge Project Study

    As per requirement, NHAI has initiated another 4-lane bridge over river Narmada. For this bridge, L&T proposed Extradosed bridge design keeping the aesthetics and economy as a priority and won the contract from NHAI. Whole Project is considered as a case study to understand the life cycle of the project and phases of the project.

  19. Sardar Sarovar Dam

    Sardar Sarovar Dam on Narmada River. The Sardar Sarovar Dam is a concrete gravity dam built on the Narmada River near the town of Kevadiya, in Narmada District, in the Indian state of Gujarat.The dam was constructed to provide water and electricity to the Indian states of Gujarat, Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra and Rajasthan.. India's first Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru laid the foundation of ...

  20. Conceptualising Movements against Large Dams: Case Study Analysis of

    The Narmada Bachao Andolan (NBA) is a protracted struggle of more than three decades against large dams. ... A Comparative Case Analyses of World Commission on Dams and Anti-Personnel Mine-Ban Treaty', Diplomatic Studies Division, Centre for International Politics, Organisation and Disarmament (CIPOD), School of International Studies ...

  21. Water quality assessment of Narmada River along the different

    The study covered the upper stretch of the Narmada River, starting from its source at Amarkantak to Hoshangabad, Madhya Pradesh (Figure 1). The Narmada basin's coordinates are 72º32ʹ E to 81º45ʹ E and 21º20ʹ N to 23º45ʹ N, with the drainage area is 98,796 km 2 (Gupta & Chakrapani, Citation 2005). The river runs between the Vindhyan ...

  22. Design Flood Estimation for Narmada Sagar Project Using Partial

    Goel, N.K. and Seth, S.M.1985.,'Tentative Spillway Design Flood Estimation for Narmada Sagar Project-A Case Study' Seminar on Flood Frequency Analysis, pp.78-92, New Delhi. Google Scholar Hall, M.J. and O'Connell, P.E.1972 Time Series Analysis of Mean Daily Flows Water and Water Engineering, Vol.76, pp.125-133.

  23. Case Studies: Real-World Success Achieved with Artech Solutions

    Case Studies. Artech's DEI Impact in Tech Sector; Enhancing Efficiency & Cost Savings With Artech's MVP; Comprehensive management of more than 17,000 users; Ensuring Uptime and Performance; Improved Business Outcomes & Compliance; Improved Customer Experience in Higher Education; Dispatch Support for Large Projects; Careers. Corporate ...

  24. Implementing the Report of the World Commission on Dams: A Case Study

    light of the Narmada Valley case study. The Narmada Valley initiatives demonstrate that the major apprehension -that the process recommended by the WCD would be lengthy and cumbersome - is unfounded. The WCD recommendations' roots are in countries such as India, whereas the criticism stems from the belief that the WCD's