Delhi LG Reviews DDA Plan to Restore 77 Water Bodies in 90 Days

Lieutenant Governor V K Saxena reviewed DDA's plan to restore 77 water bodies in Delhi within 90 days. Six water bodies will be restored in 30 days, 48 in 60 days, and 23 in 90 days. Delhi CM Rekha Gupta also chaired a meeting on summer water supply, deploying 1,210 tankers and increasing tubewells to 6,200. The government has replaced 172 km of old pipelines and is focusing on long-term solutions to water shortages.

Key Points: Delhi LG Reviews DDA Plan to Restore 77 Water Bodies

  • DDA to restore 77 water bodies in 90 days
  • Six water bodies targeted in 30 days
  • CM Rekha Gupta reviews summer water supply plan
  • 1,210 water tankers deployed for water-scarce areas
3 min read

LG VK Saxena reviews DDA plan to restore 77 water bodies in Delhi

LG VK Saxena reviews DDA's time-bound plan to restore 77 water bodies in Delhi within 90 days. CM Rekha Gupta also reviews summer water supply.

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

New Delhi, May 9

Lieutenant Governor of Delhi V K Saxena on Saturday reviewed a presentation by the Delhi Development Authority on a time-bound action plan for the revival and restoration of Delhi's water bodies, as part of efforts to tackle their rapid deterioration ahead of the summer season.

According to his post on X, the DDA will immediately commence work on 77 water bodies across the city. Of these, six water bodies are targeted to be restored within the next 30 days, 48 within 60 days, and the remaining 23 within 90 days under a phased restoration programme.

During the presentation, other major developmental projects were also discussed, particularly initiatives aimed at transforming the sub-cities of Dwarka, Rohini and Narela.

The Lieutenant Governor instructed officials to ensure the immediate rollout of all proposed plans and strict adherence to the committed timelines.

Earlier on May 5, Delhi Chief Minister Rekha Gupta chaired a high-level review meeting at the Secretariat to assess the city's water management plan for the summer months.

The meeting took stock of the progress of key water-related projects, with the Chief Minister directing officials to ensure there is no lapse in supply or response during peak demand.

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," CM Gupta said.

Highlighting preparedness for the summer, the Chief Minister said the 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.

The Delhi CM outlined several key improvements made this year. She mentioned that 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.CM Gupta highlighted that 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.

Chief Minister Rekha Gupta stated that, in order to enhance water availability, 520 additional tube wells have been installed and 172 kilometres of old water pipelines were replaced during the year 2025-26, resulting in improved water supply.

"Additionally, work is underway on valve regulation, the laying of new pipelines, and the large-scale cleaning of sewer lines. The annual cleaning of all underground reservoirs has been completed, and preventive maintenance has been ensured for all pump sets and booster pumping stations utilised within the distribution system. A dedicated drive is also in progress to detect and repair leakages across transmission and distribution networks," CM Gupta said.

- ANI

Share this article:

Reader Comments

P
Priya S
Thank God both LG and CM are on the same page here. Water scarcity in summers is a nightmare for us in South Delhi. The increased tankers from 1,166 to 1,210 is good but Sangam Vihar needs more. We had to queue up at 4am last year 😓
M
Michael C
Impressive to see the scale of this initiative. 77 water bodies in 90 days seems ambitious. The 172 km of replaced pipelines should help reduce the leakage I've read about. Hope they also factor in groundwater recharge - that's the long-term solution.
R
Rohit P
Dwarka, Rohini, Narela transformation sounds good but first fix our water! We're in Okhla area and water pressure is pathetic in mornings. Increased tubewells from 5,834 to 6,200 is a start but what about water quality? Many borewells in our area have high TDS. 🤔
K
Kavya N
The part about cleaning 8,700 to 13,000 fixed supply points is reassuring. But in Chhatarpur area we still see tankers coming irregularly. Need better monitoring. Also appreciated that CM mentioned strict action for negligence - that's the only way this will work.
D
David E
These restoration plans are crucial for Delhi's ecology. The 77 water bodies, if properly revived, could help with flood management too. I'm curious about the "major developmental projects" mentioned for Dwarka - hope they involve green infrastructure and rainwater harvesting mandates.

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

Leave a Comment

Minimum 50 characters 0/50