Kutch Lists 910 Lakes in Revenue Records for Water Management Boost

The Kutch district administration has formally brought 910 lakes across 281 villages into official revenue records. This three-month initiative, led by Collector Anand Patel, covers all 10 talukas and grants official status to approximately 5,691 acres of lake land. The move provides a legal identity to previously unrecorded water bodies, enabling structured conservation and development work. Officials state this will prevent future disputes and allow these lakes to benefit from government water conservation schemes.

Key Points: Kutch Lists 910 Lakes for Structured Water Management

  • 910 lakes across 281 villages recorded
  • 5,691 acres granted official status
  • Aims to prevent encroachment and disputes
  • Enables access to govt conservation schemes
3 min read

Kutch lists 910 lakes across 281 villages for structured water management

Kutch district formally records 910 lakes across 281 villages to enable conservation and water harvesting in Gujarat's arid region.

"With their inclusion in revenue records, these lakes can now be taken up under government schemes - Collector Anand Patel"

Bhuj, Feb 9

The Kutch district administration has completed a comprehensive exercise to formally bring 910 lakes across 281 villages into official revenue records, enabling structured conservation, water harvesting, protection and beautification works in Gujarat's largest and water-stressed district.

The initiative, carried out under the guidance of Collector Anand Patel, was completed within a short span of three months and covered all 10 talukas of the district.

Through scientific land measurement, field verification and final revenue orders, approximately 5,691 acres of land associated with these lakes has been granted official (niyam) status, officials said.

Kutch lies in a semi-arid geographical zone where water remains a critical requirement for drinking purposes, agriculture and animal husbandry.

While numerous lakes and water bodies existed across the district, many did not have a clearly defined legal identity or recorded area in revenue records, which limited the scope for planned conservation, development and protection work.

The district administration, therefore, launched a mission-mode campaign to identify such lakes and formally record them.

As part of the process, modern survey techniques were used by the District Inspector of Land Records (DILR), the revenue department authority responsible for land measurement, boundary fixation and record preparation.

Officials said the involvement of the DILR will help prevent future disputes, encroachments and illegal occupation of lake land.

According to official data, 313 lakes were recorded in Bhuj taluka, 163 in Nakhatrana, 132 in Anjar, 87 in Abdasa, 78 in Bhachau, 45 in Lakhpat, 38 in Mandvi, 25 in Mundra, 18 in Rapar and 11 in Gandhidham, taking the total to 910.

In Bhuj city, orders have been issued to grant official status to 21 lakes, and the process of handing them over to the concerned authorities has been completed.

Officials said several lakes identified during the campaign were located on grazing land, and their complete details have been shared with the district panchayat to ensure protection and management through local self-government institutions.

Collector Anand Patel said, "With their inclusion in revenue records, these lakes can now be taken up under government schemes such as Sujalam Sufalam Yojana, Amrit Sarovar and other water conservation programmes. The administration expects the move to support groundwater recharge, improve water levels in nearby wells, borewells and tubewells, reduce salinity and help improve the local micro-climate."

Plantation activities around lake peripheries by the forest department and planned works by the irrigation department are also proposed. Officials said the exercise is among the largest district-level efforts in Gujarat to formally recognise lake lands, creating a clear administrative framework for long-term water resource management in Kutch.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
Finally! So many of these lakes were just there, but without legal identity, they were prone to encroachment and neglect. Bringing them under schemes like Sujalam Sufalam can truly transform agriculture and drinking water availability. A much-needed step for Gujarat's largest district.
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Rohit P
Good move, but the real test is implementation. We've seen many such 'recordings' before. Will the forest department's plantation actually happen? Will the local panchayats get the funds and authority to maintain them? Hope this isn't just another paper exercise.
S
Sarah B
As someone who has visited Kutch, the water scarcity is palpable. This structured approach using modern survey techniques to prevent future disputes is very smart planning. Protecting 5,691 acres of lake land is a significant achievement for long-term ecological balance.
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Vikram M
Bhuj taluka alone has 313 lakes! That's surprising and encouraging. If managed well, this can be a game-changer for groundwater recharge and reducing salinity. The involvement of DILR is crucial to stop land mafias. Jai Jal, Jai Jeevan! 💧
M
Michael C
This is exactly the kind of data-driven governance needed. Creating a clear administrative framework for 910 water bodies across 281 villages sets a brilliant precedent. Other arid districts in India should replicate this model.
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