New Delhi: Prime Minister Narendra Modi paid tribute to former Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee and unveiled the mega scheme – ‘Atal Bhujal Yojana’ - at the Vigyan Bhawan in New Delhi on Wednesday. 

The Cabinet on Tuesday had approved the Atal Bhujal Yojana, a Rs 6,000 crore scheme that will be implemented in the next five years, with an aim to improve groundwater management through community participation in seven states.

Addressing the gathering, PM Modi urged citizens to save every drop of water and assured that every household will get access to water through Atal Jal Yojana. 

PM Modi blamed the past governments for poor water management, says lack of holistic approach in the past hindered access to basic necessity like water. 

Modi also appealed to startups to develop technology that reduces dependence on water and said the country needs to move towards micro-irrigation. He also assured that 15 crore households will have tap water access in 5 years.  

Also read: PM Modi, President pay tributes to Atal Bihari Vajpayee on his 95th birth anniversary

Briefing reporters on Tuesday, Union minister Prakash Javadekar said the scheme is expected to benefit nearly 8,350 Gram panchayats in 78 districts in Gujarat, Haryana, Karnataka, Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra, Rajasthan and Uttar Pradesh.

The scheme, also known as ''Atal Jal'', will promote panchayat-led ground water management and behavioural change with primary focus on demand-side management.

A statement said that of the total outlay of Rs 6,000 crore, 50% shall be in the form of World Bank loan and will be repaid by the Central Government.

The remaining 50% shall be through Central assistance from regular budgetary support. The entire World Bank''s loan component and Central assistance shall be passed on to the states as grants, it said.

The scheme is aimed at contributing towards the goal of doubling farmers'' incomes, promoting participatory ground water management, improving water use efficiency on a mass scale, improving cropping pattern and promoting efficient and equitable use of ground water resources and behavioural change at the community level, the statement added.

The scheme has two major components -- one is institutional strengthening and capacity building for sustainable ground water management in the states including improving monitoring networks, capacity building, strengthening of water user associations.

The second component is incentivising the states for achievements in improved groundwater management practices namely data dissemination, preparation of water security plans, implementation of management interventions through convergence of ongoing schemes, adopting demand side management practices, etc.

Ground water contributes to nearly 65% of total irrigated area of the country and nearly 85% of the rural drinking water supply. 

With PTI Inputs