JAL JEEVAN MISSION c4s Lyst2286
JAL JEEVAN MISSION c4s Lyst2286
JAL JEEVAN MISSION c4s Lyst2286
C4S
Contents
1 What this scheme is all about?....................................................................................................... 2
2 Per capita water requirement ........................................................................................................ 2
3 Criteria for 100% FHTC Village ........................................................................................................... 3
4 Who prepares Village Action Plan ................................................................................................ 3
5 Institutional Mechanism ................................................................................................................... 3
6 Implementation support agencies ................................................................................................ 4
7 Scheme Cycle .............................................................................................................................. 4
8 Community contribution ................................................................................................................ 4
9 Incentive ........................................................................................................................................ 5
10 Fund Sharing.................................................................................................................................... 5
11 For JJM Urban .............................................................................................................................. 5
12 Fund allocation criteria ............................................................................................................... 5
13 Flexi Funds .................................................................................................................................... 5
14 Rashtriya Jal Jeevan Kosh ........................................................................................................... 6
15 Monitoring................................................................................................................................... 6
16 Points to remember ..................................................................................................................... 6
17 Atal Bhujal .................................................................................................................................... 8
17.1 Background............................................................................................................................. 8
18 What it is? ...................................................................................................................................... 9
19 Components of Atal Jal ............................................................................................................. 9
20 Current Happenings .................................................................................................................. 9
• During her Budget speech, the Hon’ble Finance Minister announced JAL JEEVAN
MISSION Over 12X increase (2023-24 – 70,000 cr) in outlay since FY 2018-19 which has
been designed to provide universal coverage of water supply to all households
through functional taps in all 4,378 statutory towns in accordance with SDGGoal- 6. So
overall JJM covers following areas
5 Institutional Mechanism
• A four-tier institutional mechanism is to be set up at National, State, District and Villagelevel.
➢ National Level - National Jal Jeevan Mission (NJJM)
➢ State level - State Water and Sanitation Mission (SWSM)
➢ District Water and Sanitation Mission (DWSM)
➢ Gram Panchayat and/or its subcommittee, i.e. Village Water and Sanitation
Committee (VWSC)/ Paani Samiti/ User Group, etc.
• The SWSM would have i.) Apex Committee, and ii.) Executive Committee
• Apex committee is headed by Chief Secretary, The Apex Committee will meet at least
twice a year and if possible, quarterly
• DWSM will be headed by Deputy Commissioner/ District Collector (DC)
• Drinking water quality monitoring protocol, to be undertaken by local community,
Gram Panchayat and/ or its sub-committee, i.e. VWSC/ Paani Samiti/ User Group, etc.or
Schools using Field Test Kits (FTKs)
• Gram Sabha will decide whether GP or its subcommittee will carry out the
responsibilities of water supply management in the village. Wherever the
subcommittee is chosen, i.e. VWSC/ Paani Samiti/ User Group, etc. it may be headed by
Sarpanch/ UpSarpanch/ GP member/ traditional village head/ senior village leader as
the Gram Sabha may decide and Panchayat Secretary/ Patwari/ Talati may actas
Secretary.
7 Scheme Cycle
Ordinarily, in-village water supply infrastructure development may take 12 to 18 months. Thesame
can be divided into following three phases:
• planning and mobilization phase; (3-6 months)
• implementation phase; (6-12 months)
• post-implementation phase. (3-4 months)
For single village schemes, the scheme cycle can range between 12 to 18 months
8 Community contribution
• Gram Panchayat and/ or its sub-committee will contribute 5% of the capital cost incash
and/ or kind and/ or labour in hilly and forested areas, NE and Himalayan States and villages
having more than 50% SCs and/ or STs population; and 10% of the capital cost in other
villages.
• Willingness of the community and contribution as mandated under JJM from at least 80%
households of the village is a pre-requisite for taking up water supply scheme
• For on-going erstwhile NRDWP schemes, there will not be any community contribution
towards the capital cost.
• However, while retrofitting (Retrofitting is the addition of new technology or features toolder
systems) to make them JJM compliant, community is to contribute 5% or 10% ofthe capital
cost
10 Fund Sharing
• For Union Territories, there will be 100% central funding. For North Eastern and Hill States,central
funding for projects will be 90%. Central funding will be 50% for cities will less than 1 lakh
population, one third for cities with 1 lakh to 10 lakh population and 25% for cities with million
plus population.
• Funding from Government for projects will be in three tranches of 20:40:40.
13 Flexi Funds
Flexi fund under JJM can be used to achieve the following objectives:
15 Monitoring
A dedicated JJM IMIS is designed to capture every Functional Household Tap Connection
(FHTC)
16 Points to remember
Water stressed districts are being determined by Central ground water board, In 2017,out of
total 731 districts, 256 with 1,592 blocks have been classified as water-stressed
Successful water supply initiatives, Water and Sanitation Management Organisation
(WASMO) in Gujarat, Swajal in Uttarakhand
Habitation – A group of minimum 20 households and/ or 100 persons.
Old programmes - National Water Supply Programme (1954), Accelerated RuralWater
Supply Programme (ARWSP, 1972); National Drinking Water Mission (NDWM, 1986) National
Rural Drinking Water Programme (NRDWP), 2017; Rural Water Supplyand Sanitation Project
for Low Income Sates (Neer Nirmal Pariyojana) was started in 2014 for a period of six years
till March, 2020; National Water Quality Sub-Mission (NWQSM) is being implemented since
March, 2017 to provide safe drinking water to identified 27,544 Arsenic/ Fluoride affected
rural habitations by March, 2021; Swajal isbeing implemented in aspirational districts
The 73 Amendment to the Constitution of India has rd placed the subject of drinking
water in the Eleventh Schedule and has assigned its management to Gram
Panchayats.
Major reforms in JJM are reducing non-revenue water to below 20%; recycle of
treated used water to meet at least 20% of total city water demand and 40% for
industrial water demand at State level;
Punjab and Tamil Nadu have become the first States to provide every school with tap water
supply. Five States, viz. Goa, Haryana, Himachal Pradesh, Tamil Nadu and Telangana
have provided 100% tap water connections in its anganwadi centres
As top priority being accorded by the Government, the budgetary allocation of Jal
Jeevan Mission has increased significantly to Rs. 50,011 Crore in 2021-22. In addition
17 Atal Bhujal
17.1 Background
• Ground water contributes to nearly 65% of total irrigated area of the country and
18 What it is?
• The Atal Bhujal Yojana (ABHY) is a central sector scheme worth Rs.6,000 crore for
sustainable management of groundwater with community participation.
• It envisages people's participation through the formation of ‘Water User Associations’,
water budgeting, preparation & implementation of Gram-panchayat-wise water
security plans, etc.
• It is being implemented by the Ministry of Jal Shakti (earlier known as Ministry of Water
Resources, River Development and Ganga Rejuvenation).
• The scheme is being funded by the Government of India and the World Bank on 50:50
basis.
• The scheme aims to improve ground water management through community
participation in identified priority areas in seven States, viz. Gujarat, Haryana,
Karnataka, Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra, Rajasthan and Uttar Pradesh.
Implementation of the scheme is expected to benefit nearly 8350 Gram Panchayats
in 78 districts in these States. (Punjab earlier was included now excluded leaving no. to 7)
• ATAL JAL will promote panchayat led ground water management and
behaviouralchange with primary focus on demand side management.
20 Current Happenings
• As the country celebrates Azadi ka Amrit Mahotsav, to mark 75 years of India’s
Independence, Jal Jeevan Mission (JJM) has achieved a new milestone by providing
10 Crore rural households with safe and clean drinking water through taps on 19th
August 2022.