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India News Updated May 24, 2026

Ladakh LG Launches 800-Acre Land Restoration Project in Leh

The Lieutenant Governor of Ladakh, Vinai Kumar Saxena, launched an ambitious ecological restoration drive to reclaim 800 acres of barren land at Spituk Village in Leh. The project uses cost-effective freshwater engineering by channelizing excess water from the Igoo-Phey Canal to hydrate soil and trigger natural vegetation growth. This initiative builds on Project Him Sarovar and aims to recharge groundwater, bind soil, and expand agricultural land. Additionally, Ladakh is set for its first commercial geothermal energy exploration at Puga Valley in collaboration with ONGC.

Ladakh LG launches ambitious 800-acre land restoration project in Leh

Leh, May 24

The Lieutenant Governor of Ladakh, Vinai Kumar Saxena, on Sunday, informed about the launch of a major ecological and degraded land restoration drive aiming to reclaim nearly 800 acres of barren land at Spituk Village in Leh.

The initiative utilises simple, cost-effective freshwater engineering by channelising excess water from the recently restored Igoo-Phey Canal to hydrate parched soils, flush out toxic salts, and trigger natural vegetation growth.

Talking to X, LG said, "Glad to share the launch of an ambitious ecological and degraded land restoration drive in Ladakh, aimed at restoring nearly 800 acres of degraded and barren land at Spituk Village in Leh, using a simple & cost-effective freshwater engineering. The land, lying barren for hundreds of years, is being watered by channelizing the excess water from the recently restored Igoo-Phey Canal, using simple machinery. Freshwater discharge would eventually hydrate the parched soils, flush out toxic salts, and trigger the natural vegetation growth, transforming wastelands into fertile, moisture-retaining ecosystems."

Building upon the success of Project Him Sarovar, this project is designed to recharge groundwater, bind soil, and expand fertile land for sustainable agricultural activities across the region.

"This initiative builds upon our successful Project Him Sarovar and complements the revival of the Igoo-Phey Canal that now irrigates over 4,300 hectares of land. By recharging groundwater, binding soil, and enabling sustainable agriculture, I am hopeful, this project will serve as a model for ecological transformation, restoring degraded land and adding more land for agriculture activities in Ladakh," LG added.

Meanwhile, Ladakh is all set for a major energy reform with the first-ever commercial exploration of geothermal energy being used as a sustainable alternative source of energy.

Earlier, Vinai Kumar Saxena approved the extension of the MoU for 5 years with Oil and Natural Gas Corporation (ONGC) - a Govt of India PSU, for setting up India's first geothermal power project at Puga valley in Ladakh, at an altitude of over 14,000 ft.

According to an official release, the earlier tripartite MoU signed with ONGC on 6th February 2021 had expired on 5th February 2026, according to an official statement. Since then, ONGC has been requesting an extension of the MoU, as a lot of work had remained incomplete due to harsh weather conditions.

— ANI

Reader Comments

Priya S

This is truly commendable! Transforming wastelands into fertile ecosystems after hundreds of years is no small feat. The combination of water channeling and sustainable agriculture will be a game-changer for local farmers. Kudos to the LG and his team.

Rohit P

While this is a positive step, I hope the salinity and soil toxicity issues are properly monitored long-term. Flushing salts is tricky in high-altitude deserts. Also, the geothermal project at Puga is exciting but hope it doesn't impact the fragile ecosystem. Progress should not harm nature.

Tanya I

Amazing work! Project Him Sarovar's success is now being replicated – that's how development should happen. 800 acres is massive for Ladakh. More green cover means better water retention and less dust storms. Jai Hind! 🇮🇳

Siddharth J

Really appreciate the cost-effectiveness aspect. In India, we often go for expensive, imported solutions when simple local methods work. That said, I hope the canal maintenance is regularized – many govt projects start well but then fade. The local community should be involved in upkeep.

Aditi M

This is inspiring for other cold deserts like Spiti and parts of Himachal. Using excess water to reclaim land instead of just letting it flow away – pure common sense! Also, the geothermal energy plans show Ladakh is serious about sustainable development. Very forward-thinking.

A < We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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