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Scheme to Ensuring Water Security
Context:
- The Union government is set to launch a ₹4,500-crore scheme aimed at ensuring water security for farmers.
- This move comes in response to growing water stress caused by irregular rainfall, which has been affecting agricultural productivity.
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- The scheme, expected to be announced at the 8th Water Week in New Delhi (17–21 September), will initially run for two years, pending approval from the Union cabinet.
- Its goal is to strengthen India’s agricultural economy and save 100 billion cubic metres (BCM) of water annually, ensuring year-round water supply to households across the country.
About the Scheme
- The new scheme will be part of the Pradhan Mantri Krishi Sinchayee Yojana (PMKSY), launched in 2015 to boost farm productivity with a focus on irrigation.
- The new initiative is expected to have an estimated outlay of ₹4,500 crore for two years.
- PMKSY consists of two major components—the Accelerated Irrigation Benefit Programme and the Har Khet Ko Pani (HKKP) scheme, which aims to provide water for every farm.
- HKKP, in turn, has four subcomponents: command area development and water management, surface minor irrigation, repair, renovation, and restoration (RRR) of water bodies, and groundwater development.
- The upcoming scheme will mainly modernise the command area development component.
- The new scheme will provide hardware infrastructure that will be handed over to these farmer societies for management.
- The cost of this infrastructure will be shared between the Union and state governments, with a 60:40 funding split.