Delhi CM Rekha Gupta Reviews Summer Water Plan, Focuses on Supply Augmentation

Delhi Chief Minister Rekha Gupta reviewed the city's summer water management plan, emphasizing smooth supply and long-term solutions for shortages. She directed officials to ensure prompt response to complaints and warned of strict action for negligence. The meeting, attended by Water Minister Parvesh Verma and senior officials, focused on increasing tubewells, tankers, and fixed supply points. A 24x7 helpline and 28 water emergency centers have been set up to improve grievance redressal.

Key Points: Delhi CM Rekha Gupta Reviews Summer Water Plan

  • CM Rekha Gupta reviews summer water plan
  • Stresses supply augmentation and long-term solutions
  • Directs officials to ensure smooth supply and prompt complaint redressal
  • Increases tubewells, tankers, and fixed supply points
  • Sets up 28 water emergency centers and 24x7 helplines
3 min read

Delhi CM Rekha Gupta reviews summer water plan, stresses supply augmentation

Delhi CM Rekha Gupta reviews summer water plan, stresses supply augmentation, long-term solutions, and enhanced monitoring to tackle shortages.

"Our focus is not limited to immediate relief. We are simultaneously working on long-term solutions to free Delhi from recurring drinking water shortages. - Delhi CM Rekha Gupta"

New Delhi, May 4

Delhi Chief Minister Rekha Gupta on Monday reviewed the city's water management plan for the summer months, stressing smooth and balanced supply and long-term solutions for shortage.

At a meeting held at the Secretariat, the Chief Minister took stock of the progress of key water-related projects, directing officials to ensure there is no lapse in supply or response during peak demand, an official statement said.

She stressed that every complaint must be addressed promptly and warned that negligence would invite strict action.

"Our focus is not limited to immediate relief. We are simultaneously working on long-term solutions to free Delhi from recurring drinking water shortages," the Chief Minister said.

The meeting was attended by Water Minister Parvesh Verma, Chief Secretary Rajeev Verma and senior officials of the Delhi Jal Board.

Highlighting preparedness for the summer, the Chief Minister said the Delhi government has tightened monitoring at every level to maintain a smooth and balanced supply.

All major water treatment plants -- Sonia Vihar, Bhagirathi, Chandrawal, Wazirabad, Haiderpur, Nangloi, Okhla, Bawana and Dwarka, have been directed to operate at peak capacity.

"Coordination with Haryana is also being maintained to monitor ammonia levels in raw water, ensuring uninterrupted functioning of treatment plants," the statement said.

"Areas facing water shortages have been identified, and targeted arrangements have been put in place to bridge the gap," it added.

Chief Minister Gupta outlined several key improvements made this year.

The number of operational tubewells has been increased from 5,834 to 6,200, while water tankers have been scaled up from 1,166 to 1,210.

Fixed supply points have risen from 8,700 to 13,000, and filling hydrants from 198 to 202.

To strengthen tanker-based supply in water-scarce areas, 1,210 tankers have been deployed, with an additional 100 kept on standby.

Deployment has been tailored constituency-wise, with high-demand areas such as Sangam Vihar, Matiala, Chhatarpur, Deoli, Tughlakabad, Palam, Bijwasan and Bawana receiving special attention.

The Chief Minister said detailed planning has been completed at the constituency level, including allocation of responsibilities, colony-wise supply schedules, tanker route plans and resource deployment.

The grievance redressal system has been reinforced with 24x7 helplines (1916 and 1800117118).

Complaints are routed directly to the concerned junior engineer and 100 per cent feedback is being ensured.

A central control room and chatbot-based system have also been introduced, alongside PPP-mode call centres in several areas.

Across the city, 28 water emergency centres have been set up at strategic locations, operating round the clock.

These centres are equipped with adequate staff, communication systems and CCTV surveillance to ensure swift resolution of supply-related issues.

Chief Minister Gupta directed officials to expedite efforts to augment water supply and to swiftly commission the second 50 MGD water treatment plant located in Dwarka.

She also hailed the preparations to soon operationalise the 2 MGD capacity recycling plant at the Bawana Water Treatment Plant as a significant achievement, an important step towards promoting water reuse within the city.

The Chief Minister said that, in order to enhance water availability, 520 additional tubewells have been installed and 172 km of old water pipelines were replaced during the year 2025-26, resulting in improved water supply.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
Good to see coordination with Haryana on ammonia levels – that's been a pain point in past summers. But why are we still dependent on tankers? 13,000 fixed supply points is good but areas like Sangam Vihar have been water-starved for decades. Hope the 24x7 helpline actually works this time.
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Michael C
I'm from the US but living in Delhi NCR. The accountability measures here – 100% feedback, chatbot, control rooms – are better than many water utilities back home. Still, 520 new tubewells won't solve the groundwater depletion issue. Recycling plant at Bawana is a smart move though! 💡
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Vikram M
Arre yaar, every summer same story – meetings, reviews, announcements. But real issue is water theft and illegal borewells in unauthorized colonies. Unless they fix the distribution network (replacing 172 km of old pipes is good but we need thousands more), these tankers are just band-aids. Still, giving credit where due – the operational days mentioned show some planning.
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Sarah B
Impressive that they've set up 28 water emergency centers with CCTV surveillance. That's more transparent than most Western cities. But I wonder – is the chatbot system available in Hindi and other regional languages? That's crucial for reaching every citizen. 🤔
K
Kavya N
I live in Matiala, one of the 'high-demand' areas they mentioned. Honestly, tanker schedules are still erratic. But yes, the new helpline number (1916) actually connected me to a JE within 10 minutes last week – improvement from last year! Baby steps. The recycled

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