Key Points

India's states and UTs now offer over 21,000 e-services, with local governance utilities dominating the landscape. Maharashtra and Uttarakhand stand out as the only regions achieving full mandatory e-service saturation. The NeSDA report highlights Tripura's exceptional contribution of 424 new digital services in a single month. Chandigarh's Right to Services framework and national portals like GST emerge as governance benchmarks in this digital transformation.

Key Points: India's e-services cross 21060 with Maharashtra Uttarakhand at 100%

  • Tripura leads new e-service additions with 424 in April
  • Maharashtra and Uttarakhand achieve 100% mandatory service saturation
  • Chandigarh pioneers RTS framework for transparent governance
  • GST and cybercrime portals highlighted as national best practices
3 min read

E-services in India's states, UTs cross 21,060

India achieves 79% mandatory e-service saturation as 16 states/UTs cross 90% digital governance, led by Maharashtra and Uttarakhand's 100% completion.

"1,599 out of 2,016 mandatory e-services now available online across all 36 states/UTs - NeSDA Report"

New Delhi, June 19

The total number of e-services provided across states and UTs in the country have touched the of 21,062 mark, with the majority of these services (7,065) falling under the Local Governance and Utility Services sector, according to a report released by the Department of Administrative Reforms and Public Grievances (DARPG) on Thursday.

Another 424 new e-services have been added in April by various states and UTs, with Tripura contributing the highest number of additions across all focus sectors, the National e-Governance Service Delivery Assessment (NeSDA) report states.

A total of 1,599 out of 2,016 mandatory e-services (56 for each of the 36 states/UTs) are now available online across all 36 states and union territories, achieving a saturation rate of over 79 per cent.

There were 16 states and UTs that achieved over 90 per cent saturation, while Maharashtra and Uttarakhand achieved 100 per cent saturation.

The report highlights Chandigarh’s commitment to strengthening public service delivery through the Right to Services (RTS) framework. It also brings attention to ongoing efforts to unify service delivery and ensure real-time transparency for citizens.

The report also captures the details of e-services by states and UTs made available through their single unified service delivery portals and status of incorporation of the three new additional assessment parameters that have been included in the NeSDA framework, namely, Open Government Data, e-participation and leveraging Emerging Technologies.

Comprehensive service delivery portals of Central government ministries/departments, the Goods and Services Tax Portal and National Cyber Crime Reporting Portal have been highlighted as examples of best practices in the report.

The Department of Administrative Reforms and Public Grievances (DARPG) formulated the National e-Governance Service Delivery Assessment (NeSDA) Framework in 2019 to assess states and UTs and Central Ministries with regard to the delivery of their e-services as a benchmarking exercise, covering seven sectors.

DARPG conducts the NeSDA study biennially. DARPG monitors the progress made in e-service delivery across states/UTs through inputs provided by them on NeSDA Way Forward Dashboard, NeSDA Way Forward monthly reports and regular review meetings with SPoCs from states and UTs. So far, 25 NeSDA Way Forward Monthly Reports and the Annual Report 2023 have been published to monitor the status of e-service delivery across states and UTs.

This series of NeSDA Monthly Reports systematically monitors and evaluates the scale and quality of e-Services provided across all states and Union Territories since its inception in April 2023. The update has consistently reported on three key categories of online services each month: all e-Services, mandatory e-Services, and those delivered through a unified portal.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

Here are 6 diverse Indian perspective comments for the e-services article:
R
Rajesh K.
This is fantastic progress! Just last month I renewed my driving license online in 10 minutes flat - something that used to take half a day at RTO. More power to Digital India! 🇮🇳 But hope they improve rural internet connectivity too.
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Priya M.
While the numbers look impressive, the user experience needs work. Many state portals crash frequently and have confusing interfaces. Maharashtra's 100% saturation is commendable though - their Aaple Sarkar portal is quite smooth.
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Arjun S.
Good to see smaller states like Tripura leading in new additions. Shows digital transformation isn't just for big states. But what about local language support? My parents in Kerala struggle with English-heavy interfaces.
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Sunita R.
Used the GST portal last week - what a relief compared to old tax filing days! But government should conduct more awareness camps, especially for small shopkeepers who still fear online processes.
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Vikram J.
The real test is whether these services reduce corruption. In my district, some officials still demand bribes saying "online system isn't working". Need stricter monitoring at ground level.
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Neha P.
Appreciate the transparency in reporting through monthly dashboards. Hope they include citizen feedback scores next time - numbers alone don't tell the full story. Overall, great initiative! 👏

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