Ganga Rejuvenation: CAG Highlights Deficiencies in Uttarakhand's Namami Gange Efforts

Ganga Rejuvenation: CAG Highlights Deficiencies in Uttarakhand's Namami Gange Efforts.webp

Dehradun, March 13 A report by the Comptroller and Auditor General (CAG) has highlighted the role of implementing agencies in Uttarakhand for the failure of the Centre's 'Namami Gange' programme to achieve the desired results in the state.

The report stated that under the flagship programme, launched over a decade ago to clean the Ganga river, the Centre had provided Rs 1,000 crore between 2018 and 2023 for the effective implementation of the project in the state.

However, the report, presented during the ongoing state's budget session, notes several irregularities found in this project, including defective designs of sewage treatment plants (STPs), poor maintenance of infrastructure, failure to tap drains discharging into the Ganga, and the dumping of waste near rivers and smaller streams.

The CAG observed that the detailed project report (DPR) for Forestry Interventions for the Ganga (FIG) included a budgetary provision of Rs 885.91 crore and a plantation target of 54,855.43 hectares.

However, contrary to this, only Rs 144.27 crore—amounting to just 16 per cent of the allocated funds — was actually utilised. Consequently, physical progress remained sluggish, and the scheme failed to achieve the specific objectives related to the rejuvenation of the Ganga.

Of the 44 STPs inspected by the CAG in 2023, only three to five were found to be compliant with the norms set by the National Green Tribunal (NGT), while merely six to twelve were found to be in compliance with the standards of the Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change (MoEF) and other relevant criteria.

The report states that this reveals widespread non-compliance and a substandard level of sewage treatment.

Of these 44 STPs, the majority demonstrated gross non-compliance with the norms of both the MoEF and the NGT across all three quarters of 2023, with levels of Biochemical Oxygen Demand (BOD), Total Suspended Solids (TSS), and Faecal Coliform far exceeding the permissible limits.

The report also notes that in Chamoli, Rudraprayag, Tehri, and Uttarkashi districts, cremation ghats were constructed at 11 locations without assessing local needs or cultural practices; consequently, these facilities are neither being utilised nor maintained, while funeral pyres continue to be lit along the riverbanks.

According to the report, in 2011, the then State River Conservation Authority set a target to prevent untreated urban wastewater and industrial effluents from entering the Ganga by 2020; yet, state government officials have failed to formulate a plan even 13 years later.

The report further states that District Ganga Plans were not formulated in any of the districts within the Ganga basin—including Uttarkashi, Tehri, Chamoli, Rudraprayag, Pauri, Dehradun, and Haridwar—resulting in the poor management of sewage-related issues and a failure to achieve the 2020 target.
 
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biochemical oxygen demand budgetary allocation comptroller and auditor general district ganga plans faecal coliform forestry interventions ganga river ministry of environment namami gange national green tribunal river conservation authority sewage treatment plants total suspended solids uttarakhand waste management
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