Every drop counts – Review of the Jal Jeevan Mission | 4th October 2022 | UPSC Daily Editorial Analysis

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What is the article about?

  • The annual surveys to assess the success of the Jal Jeevan Mission Scheme were recently made public. Its key findings are critically discussed in this article.

Relevance:

  • GS2: Government Policies and Interventions for Development in various sectors; Prelims: Jal Jeevan Mission Scheme

Current state of the scheme:

  • Under the Jal Jeevan Mission, led by the Department of Drinking Water and Sanitation, 10.2 crore rural households, or about 53% of the eligible population, now have tap water access. This is a 37-percentage point rise from 2019 when the scheme was announced, where its stated aim is to ensure at least 55 litres per person per day of potable water to every rural household — which implies a mere connection does not suffice.
  • A recent audit, by a private agency, found that around 62% of rural households in India had fully functional tap water connections within their premises.
  • A report of a Parliamentary Standing Committee on Water Resources in March, based on numbers provided by the nodal Jal Shakti Ministry, stated that 46% households had such fully functional tap water connections.
  • If the numbers are accurate, however, this represents an impressive rise in potable, tap water accessibility and suggests that the mission is well on its way to meeting its 2024 target.

Analysis:

  • The reports have highlighted two key challenges:
    1. The wide disparities in achievement:
      • Tamil Nadu, Himachal Pradesh, Goa and Puducherry reported more than 80% of households with fully functional connections while less than half the households in Rajasthan, Kerala, Manipur, Tripura, Maharashtra, Madhya Pradesh, Mizoram and Sikkim had such connections.
      • About 75% of households received water all days of the week, and only 8% just once a week. On average, households got water for three hours every day.
    2. A problem of chlorine contamination:
      • Though 93% of the water samples were reportedly free of bacteriological contamination, most of the anganwadi centres and schools had higher than the permissible range of residual chlorine.

Jal Jeevan Mission:

  • Launched in 2019, it envisages supply of 55 litres of water per person per day to every rural household through Functional Household Tap Connections (FHTC) by 2024.
  • It comes under Jal Shakti Ministry.
  • The programme will also implement source sustainability measures as mandatory elements, such as recharge and reuse through grey water management, water conservation, rain water harvesting.
  • The Jal Jeevan Mission will be based on a community approach to water and will include extensive Information, Education and communication as a key component of the mission.
  • The Jal Jeevan Mission will be based on a community approach to water and will include extensive Information, Education and communication as a key component of the mission.
  • JJM looks to create a jan andolan for water, thereby making it everyone’s priority.

Way Forward:

  • The COVID-19 pandemic disrupted the progress of the scheme but with the economy now close to pre-pandemic levels, it is likely that the challenges of labour and material have softened somewhat to aid the progress of the scheme.
  • The Centre should liaise better with States that are falling behind in targets and ensure that the infrastructure created as part of the scheme is long lasting and not merely to meet election targets.



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