Tamil Nadu's Athikadavu-Avinashi Project Faces Water Shortfall, Farmers in Distress

The Athikadavu-Avinashi irrigation project in Tamil Nadu, operational since August 2024, has failed to adequately supply water to all intended regions, leaving farmers in Coimbatore, Tiruppur, and Erode districts facing severe shortages. Farmers report some waterbodies received only 10% of their capacity, severely impacting agriculture despite the project's promises. Officials attribute the shortfall to an early monsoon drawing surplus water in advance and technical issues like damaged pipelines affecting about 5% of waterbodies. With the annual water allocation exhausted, authorities have assured priority for affected areas next monsoon while farmers demand better maintenance and equitable distribution.

Key Points: Water Shortage Hits TN's Athikadavu-Avinashi Project, Farmers Concerned

  • Project aims to divert Bhavani River water
  • Farmers report only 10% tank capacity in areas
  • Officials cite technical issues and early monsoon
  • 5% of waterbodies not fully supplied
2 min read

Water shortfall hits TN's Athikadavu-Avinashi project, farmers raise concerns

Tamil Nadu's Athikadavu-Avinashi irrigation project faces water distribution issues, leaving farmers in three districts struggling with insufficient supply.

"Even after the Athikadavu-Avinashi project came into effect, many villages continue to face drought-like conditions. – S. Appusamy, Tamil Nadu Farmers Association"

Chennai, Dec 28

The Tamil Nadu Water Resources Department has acknowledged that several waterbodies under the Athikadavu-Avinashi irrigation project did not receive adequate water this year and assured that priority would be given to these areas during the next monsoon season.

The flagship project, which became operational on August 17, 2024, aims to divert surplus water from the Bhavani River to rejuvenate 1,045 waterbodies across Coimbatore, Tiruppur and Erode districts. As part of the project, 1.5 thousand million cubic feet (tmcft) of water was allocated for distribution this year. However, farmers in several regions have raised concerns over insufficient water supply.

According to them, many tanks and ponds received only partial inflow, leaving agricultural activity severely affected despite the project being operational for more than a year. S. Appusamy, president of the Tamil Nadu Farmers Association in Pongupalayam Union, said that several waterbodies in the northern parts of Tiruppur district received barely 10 per cent of their capacity. "Even after the Athikadavu-Avinashi project came into effect, many villages continue to face drought-like conditions. Similar problems exist in parts of Coimbatore and Erode districts as well. There needs to be a permanent and equitable solution," he said.

Responding to the concerns, a senior WRD official explained that the project is dependent on surplus water from the Bhavani River.

"This year, the southwest monsoon arrived early, and the available surplus water was drawn in advance and supplied to the connected waterbodies. Nearly 95 per cent of the tanks under the project received water," the official said.

However, he admitted that around 5 per cent of the waterbodies could not be fully supplied due to technical issues such as damaged pipelines, blockages, and malfunctioning Outlet Management Systems (OMS). "These issues affected the flow in certain areas, and corrective measures are planned," the official added.

He also clarified that no further water release is possible for the current year as the allocated quantity has already been exhausted. "We are confident that sufficient surplus water will be available again next year, as the Bhavani River has recorded good inflows for the past three consecutive years. Priority will be given to waterbodies that received inadequate supply this time," the official said.

Farmers, meanwhile, have urged the government to ensure timely maintenance and equitable distribution so that the project's full benefits reach all intended regions.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
Heart goes out to the farmers in Tiruppur. Getting only 10% water is like having no water at all. The government must fix the technical issues before next monsoon. We cannot keep having the same problem every year. 🚜
D
David E
While the official's explanation about monsoon timing and surplus water makes some sense, it highlights a key flaw. The project seems to lack a reliable buffer or storage system. What happens in a lean year? Long-term planning is needed, not just dependence on annual surplus.
S
Suresh O
Good that they have admitted the problem and promised priority next year. But "assurances" are not enough. We need to see a concrete action plan published for fixing pipelines and OMS. Public transparency in the repair work is crucial.
A
Anjali F
This is why big infrastructure projects need continuous community monitoring. The farmers' associations should have a direct channel to report blockages and damages as soon as they are spotted, not wait for the season to end.
K
Karthik V
Hoping for a better next year is not a strategy. The WRD needs to conduct a thorough audit of the entire distribution network now, in the off-season. Let's not repeat the same mistakes. Jai Kisan.

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