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India News Updated Jun 2, 2026

Centre Signs MoU with 4 States for Safe Drinking Water in Rural Areas

The Centre signed MoUs with Arunachal Pradesh, Jharkhand, Tamil Nadu, Nagaland, and Puducherry under Jal Jeevan Mission 2.0 to enhance safe drinking water supply. The reform-linked agreements mandate a gram panchayat-led, community-centred model of rural water governance. Union Jal Shakti Minister C.R. Paatil emphasized the mission's role in reducing the burden of fetching water for women and girls. Focus areas include water quality, source sustainability, and community-based monitoring.

Centre signs MoU with 4 states to boost safe drinking water supply in rural areas

New Delhi, June 2

In another major step to enhance safe drinking water supply across rural India, the Centre on Tuesday signed Memoranda of Understanding under the Jal Jeevan Mission 2.0 with four states, including Arunachal Pradesh, Jharkhand, Tamil Nadu, and Nagaland, and the Union Territory of Puducherry.

The reform‑linked MoU mandates a gram panchayat‑led, service‑based and community‑centred model of rural water governance, aligned with the objectives of Jal Jeevan Mission 2.0 and seeks to ensure that every rural household has access to quality drinking water supply in adequate quantity on a regular basis, through strengthened community participation, according to a statement issued by the Ministry of Jal Shakti.

The MoUs aim to bring structural reforms for sustainable operation and maintenance of rural water supply systems, thereby enhancing the living standards of rural communities contributing to long‑term water security, the statement said.

The MoUs were signed in the presence of the Union Jal Shakti Minister C.R. Paatil, Chief Ministers of the respective states and senior officials from the Centre's Department of Drinking Water and Sanitation (DDWS), including the Secretary Ashok Meena, during five separate meetings conducted via online video conferences.

Addressing the gathering, Union Jal Shakti Minister Paatil said that Jal Jeevan Mission, launched under the leadership of the Prime Minister Narendra Modi, has transformed rural drinking water supply across the country and reduced the ordeal of fetching water, especially by women and girls.

Under Jal Jeevan Mission 2.0, now the focus is on sustaining the infrastructures created under the Mission, functionality of tap connections, water quality, source sustainability, community ownership and regular monitoring as key priorities.

Union Minister Paatil also stressed the need for water conservation, rainwater harvesting, groundwater recharge, greywater management, catchment area protection and community-based water quality monitoring.

He said that Gram Panchayats, District Water and Sanitation Missions, State Water and Sanitation Missions, and local communities must work together to ensure reliable drinking water services.

Emphasising the importance of institutional mechanisms for sustainable water service delivery, the DDWS Secretary Ashok Meena stressed that District Water and Sanitation Mission meetings should be conducted regularly by all district collectors.

He noted that timely meetings would facilitate the preparation of village action plans and support the certification of panchayats as capable institutions for managing rural water supply systems.

The Secretary underlined that district administrations would play a crucial role in monitoring implementation, conducting periodic reviews, and extending necessary support to gram panchayats whenever required.

— IANS

Reader Comments

Ravi K

Finally, some real attention to Arunachal and Nagaland! ❤️ Our NE states always lag behind in development. Jal Jeevan Mission 2.0 should focus on source sustainability in hilly areas—rainwater harvesting is critical there.

Naveen S

The community participation part is key. Our village in Tamil Nadu has a water committee and it works well because people feel ownership. But the Minister should also address groundwater over-extraction—without that, all taps will run dry eventually.

Sarah B

Impressive to see district collectors being held accountable for water quality monitoring meetings. In rural Jharkhand, many wells are contaminated with fluoride—this MoU must prioritize testing infrastructure, not just pipeline networks.

Priya S

I like the focus on women's empowerment mentioned by the Minister—fetching water is still a daily burden for millions of rural women. But please ensure the tap connections work 24/7, not just a few hours a day like in some states. Regular supply is the real challenge.

Deepak U

The DDWS Secretary's point about village action plans is spot on. Without local-level planning, central funds get wasted. But there's also a need for transparency—publish the MoU details online so citizens can track progress. Water is too important for opaque deals.

T Tanya I

Reader Voices

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