Revised administrative approval had become a contentious issue after an irrigation scam worth thousands of crores was unearthed in the erstwhile Congress-NCP government in 2012. Krishna-Marathwada was one of the 242 irrigation projects over which the then Maharashtra government was indicted by the Comptroller and Auditor General (CAG) in his 2013 report for serious cost and time overruns.

The project is aimed at irrigating over one lakh hectares of land in the drought-prone Marathwada region. It envisages three lift irrigation schemes to draw 23.66 thousand million cubic feet (TMC) water from the Krishna basin. Of this, 17.98 TMC is proposed to be utilised for Osmanabad district and 5.68 TMC to be utilised for Ashti tehsil in Beed district.


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"We are trying to divert the run-off water during the monsoon towards the Godavari river basin. The state government has allocated Rs 15,000 crore for the ambitious Marathwada grid project. We have also requested Prime Minister Narendra Modi for (Central) assistance. I am sure we will get support from the Union government," he said.

Israel preparing Master Plan for Water grid project in Marathwada; seeks State support in reviving proposal: Israel Official

 

A senior Israel Government official today said that the Israeli National water company is preparing the master plan for the ambitious Marathwada water grid project which got delayed because of the COVID-19 pandemic. He sought the support of the Maharashtra government to revive the project.

MUMBAI: Maharashtra Chief Minister Eknath Shinde said on Sunday he hoped the Centre will provide financial aid for the ambitious water grid project in Marathwada, and announced that the state will implement an array of welfare measures to commemorate Prime Minister Narendra Modi's 73rd birthday.

Shinde, who was speaking at an event in Chhatrapati Sambhajinagar to commemorate the Marathwada Liberation Day, said they have also made a request for Central assistance for the water grid project to PM Modi, who turned 73 on Sunday.

ABSTRACT: This paper analyses a participatory groundwater governance project called Purna Groundwater Management Association (PGWMA). A pilot project under the World Bank-funded Maharashtra Water Sector Improvement Project, the PGWMA project spanned eight villages in the Marathwada region of Maharashtra. In the case study, we used ethnographic interviews, discussions with villagers, and analysis of project materials. At the governance level, we found that the groundwater problem was conceptualised in a depoliticised way and involved an oversimplified notion of the community; it also deployed a checklist-type approach to equity, sustainability and participation, and attempted to commodify water. At the level of the community, our observations of peoples access to groundwater, and of their perceptions and knowledge, showed that the project failed to inculcate the idea of groundwater as commons. While the project led to slightly improved water access, for the most part it redeployed caste, class and gender relations and led to negligible improvement in community participation. The study examines the paradoxical coexistence of the 'success' of the participatory governance model and the actual failure to steer the community-groundwater relationship towards sustainability. The case could not be entirely explained by existing critiques within development studies (the root cause of the over-extraction problem was unsustainably high groundwater need); it did not fit the 'implementation failure' critique, nor did we find a semblance of an 'ideal', 'traditional' system of resource management; a politicised understanding of the community was also insufficient. Using the Cultural Political Economy approach, we found that the historical sedimentation of high groundwater demand was linked to an imaginary of a 'better life' through social structures, political economy, technology access and postcolonial development policies that have influenced agricultural practices. The situation has become unsustainable due to dwindling water tables. Thinking through these 'undercurrents' of groundwater governance leads to a deeper understanding of the groundwater problem, its framings and meanings at multiple levels, and its links to equity and sustainability.

The Maharashtra cabinet on Tuesday gave its approval for the first phase of Rs 4293 crore Marathwada Water Grid Project to mitigate water woes in the region.The first phase of the project will be implemented

Sabri T.S. Ahmed has been working as an EFL instructor at Department of English - University of Aden - Southern Yemen since 2009. In August 2014, he joined M.A. English Program for his master degree and he is currently doing his Ph.D. research work in applied linguistics at Dr Babasaheb Ambedkar Marathwada University. His current project is 'Communication competence of South Yemeni Tertiary EFL students'. He has a long experience as an EFL instructor, English-Arabic translator and Project coordinator assistant. His main areas of interest are ELT, CALL, MALL, Critical Theory, Postcolonial Studies, Native American Fiction and Translation.

EUPHRATES Project emerges as a proposal with a wide geographical scope, covering 9states of Europe and 11 institutions from different parts of the Indian Country. Thisconsortium will join efforts in order to enhance cooperation for fostering excellence intraining and research, promoting exchange of students and researchers between India andthe EU. The Universidade de Santiago de Compostela will coordinate this proposal supportedby the joint-coordinating Institution Dr. Babasahed Ambedkar Marathwada. In the EuropeanContinent we find some Institutions with wide experience in remarkable projects, however,Indian Institutions, especially those from the so-called backward regions, have not stillachieved this goal. In this context, the EUPHRATES project is expectetd to be significant,especially for those Institutions in a long-term run. Working under this project will bringthem to a collaboration with other Institutions giving them the possibility to createboundaries among different Institutions and the opportunity to submit projects in the future.

His major areas of interest were biochemical toxicology, pharmacokinetics of antimicrobial dugs, medicinal plants, pesticide residues in food and environment and drug residues in meat and milk. Prof. Shah attended more than 20 national or international meetings and presented more than 40 scientific papers including lead papers. He also participated in more than 20 trainings/workshops, etc. conducted by reputed Institutes including IVRI and NAARM. He acted as a reviewer for a number of journals and was the founder editor of International Journal of Research in Phytochemistry and Pharmacology. Professor Shah guided several scholars for M.V.Sc. and Ph.D., acted as examiner for more than 10 Universities/Deemed Universities including IVRI. He published more than 80 papers, book chapters, etc. He was a PI or CoPI in a number of research projects. be457b7860

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