Telangana Seeks Maharashtra Dialogue on Tummidihatti Barrage Height

Telangana Government has announced plans to initiate dialogue with Maharashtra to resolve the construction of the Tummidihatti barrage. Chief Minister A Revanth Reddy instructed officials to seek permission for a 150-meter height to utilize 100 TMCs of water. State Minister N Uttam Kumar Reddy will write to Union Minister G Kishan Reddy and meet him to facilitate the process. The barrage aims to ensure water for irrigation and drinking in Telangana's upland regions, including Adilabad.

Key Points: Telangana-Maharashtra Talks on Tummidihatti Barrage

  • Telangana to hold talks with Maharashtra on Tummidihatti barrage
  • CM Revanth Reddy seeks 150-meter height for optimal water use
  • Minister Uttam Reddy to meet Union Minister G Kishan Reddy
  • Barrage to benefit irrigation and drinking in upland Telangana
3 min read

Telangana to hold talks with Maharashtra onTummiddihatti barrage

Telangana CM Revanth Reddy initiates talks with Maharashtra on constructing the Tummidihatti barrage at 150 meters to secure water for irrigation and drinking needs.

"Constructing the Tummidihatti barrage at a height of 150 meters would enable the utilisation of at least 100 TMCs of water - State Irrigation officials"

Hyderabad, April 30

In a major step, the Telangana Government has announced to initiate a dialogue with the Maharashtra government to resolve the construction of the Tummidihatti barrage.

Telangana Chief Minister A Revanth Reddy instructed the Irrigation officials to start preparations to hold talks with Maharashtra seeking permission to construct the barrage at a height of 150 meters, according to the release.

State Irrigation Minister N Uttam Kumar Reddy was assigned to write a letter to Union Minister G. Kishan Reddy and also meet the latter on Thursday to facilitate solving the issue in consultation with Maharashtra expeditiously.

At a high-level meeting, the officials and irrigation experts suggested that constructing the Tummidihatti barrage at a height of 150 meters would enable the utilisation of at least 100 TMCs of water and fulfil the interests of Telangana, as stated in the release.

The authorities said that Maharashtra had already agreed to the construction of the barrage at a height of 148 meters. Engineering experts noted that building the barrage at 152 meters would result in more submergence in Maharashtra territory, and hence, the height of 150 meters would help to draw water at a lower cost. In the PowerPoint presentation, the officials brought to the attention of the CM key aspects such as the optimal height for constructing the barrage and the volume of water that could be utilised based on different construction heights.

The Irrigation officials also apprised the Chief Minister that the government spent approximately Rs 11,000 crore on the Pranahita-Chevella project, and canal construction has been completed in several areas. 71.5 kilometres of canal work have already been executed.

CM Revanth Reddy stressed that the construction of the barrage at a height of 150 meters would not significantly affect the submergence of areas in Maharashtra and also assured that the government is ready to provide compensation to the displaced. The barrage would ensure the availability of water for both irrigation and drinking needs in the upland regions of Telangana, including Adilabad.

The CM emphasised that the barrage should facilitate water flows to Sripada Yellampalli Reservoir via gravity flow at a minimal cost.

In view of the BJP ruling in Maharashtra, CM Revanth Reddy instructed Minister Uttam Kumar Reddy to immediately write a letter to Kishan Reddy, requesting to persuade the Maharashtra government to safeguard Telangana's interests.

Uttam Reddy was assigned the responsibility of securing an appointment with the Union Minister the following day, meeting him in person and holding direct discussions on the issue.

Reviewing the progress of the restoration of Medigadda, the Chief Minister ordered the officials to expedite the completion of the geo-testing operations for the Medigadda barrage and complete the works before the start of the monsoon season.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

M
Michael C
Interesting to see India's inter-state water disputes handled diplomatically. In the US, states would be in court for years over this. Hope the compensation for displaced people is handled properly - that's always the trickiest part.
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Kavya N
11,000 crore on Pranahita-Chevella! That's massive investment. Hope the barrage doesn't get stuck in bureaucratic delays like most projects. Uttam Reddy needs to be aggressive in Delhi - Kishan Reddy is from our state, he should help. 🤞
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Rahul R
One concern: why didn't the previous government sort this out earlier? Every election season we hear about water, but real progress happens only now. At least Revanth is moving fast on Medigadda repairs too - monsoon is just weeks away!
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Sarah B
As an outsider, it's fascinating how Indian politics handles water sharing. 150 vs 152 meters - such a small difference causing such big negotiations. But gravity flow water is smart engineering, saves massive electricity costs long-term.
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Priya S
Practical question: Will we actually get 100 TMCs? Maharashtra has flooded us before by releasing water unilaterally. Need a proper agreement with penalties. Our farmers can't keep depending on rain when a river flows right next to them. 🌾
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Varun X

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