The Shahpur Kandi Barrage project that failed to take off in more than 24 years after former Prime Minister PV Narsimha Rao laid its foundation stone on April 20, 1995, has been revived, with Punjab Chief Minister Captain Amarinder Singh rededicating this national project to the people of Punjab on Friday.
Captain Amarinder Singh re-laid the foundation stone of this vital project, being constructed on the Ravi river near Madhopur headworks in the Pathankot district, six months after Punjab and Jammu and Kashmir governments entered into a historic agreement on the construction of the project.
The construction cost of the ₹126-crore project (in 1995) has gone up to over ₹2,700-crore and was to be completed by 1998. In the last 24 years, the project has witnessed many foundation ceremonies. Though foundation stones were laid by political leaders, including two Prime Ministers, Chief Ministers and Punjab’s cabinet ministers, the progress is still disappointing.
With a capacity of generating 206 MW of electricity, the Shahpur Kandi Barrage project will also help bring 37,173 hectares of cultivable command area in Punjab and Jammu and Kashmir under irrigation.
Since laying the first foundation stone, the project had been hanging fire. Former Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee promised to expedite work on April 4, 2001. Vajpayee had made the announcement while dedicating Ranjit Sagar Dam project to the nation near Pathankot.
The project is to be executed by the Punjab government. Centre had agreed to bear 90 per cent of the cost that was estimated at ₹2,285.81 crore in April 2008. Moving at a snail’s pace, the project finally came to a halt in 2014, following objections by Jammu and Kashmir, a stakeholder in the project. The Shahpur Kandi Barrage would provide irrigation facility to 5,000 hectares in Punjab and 32,173 hectares in Jammu and Kashmir.
At the foundation laying ceremony, Amarinder Singh said that of the estimated cost, which is in addition to the ₹640 crore already spent till 2014, ₹1,408 crore would be spent on the power component, with 100 per cent share of Punjab Government, and ₹685 crore on the irrigation component, with ₹485 crore to be contributed by Government of India and ₹179.28 crore by the Punjab government. The project would be completed within three years, he claimed, adding that it would result in increased irrigated of 5,000 hectares across the state.
Apart from generating clean power, the project would also improve irrigation potential of 1.18 lakh hectares of Upper Bari Doab Canal (UBDC). This would reduce the water flowing into Pakistan drastically and would help save the critical water resources of the state.
Published: undefined
The UPA government in centre declared Shahpur Kandi as a “national project” in 2008
The project will also give impetus to tourism, besides supplementing the income of residents in the region. With the construction of the Shahpur Kandi Dam, the historic Mukteshwar Temple would also be saved from submergence, the CM assured.
Moreover, nearly 280 families were ousted and have been offered jobs by the Punjab government, claimed Sunil Jakhar, Member of Parliament from Gurdaspur, who is also President of Punjab Congress Committee.
The Shahpur Kandi Barrage will generate 207 MW power and irrigate 95,000 acres of land for Punjab’s farmers. Being vital to Punjab as the Bhakra and Ranjit Sagar Dam projects, it would allow India to utilise fully the waters of the Ravi as per the Indus Waters Treaty with Pakistan.
The state will get 20 per cent of the power generated and is also entitled to 0.69 million acre feet (MAF) of water from the Ravi, of which only 0.215 MAF is being utilised currently.
Following the agreement, Kathua and Samba and some parts of Jammu district will benefit, as agricultural land in the Kandi areas, upstream and downstream. The Jammu-Pathankot national highway in Samba and Kathua districts will also be irrigated.
Published: undefined
Follow us on: Facebook, Twitter, Google News, Instagram
Join our official telegram channel (@nationalherald) and stay updated with the latest headlines
Published: undefined