Headlines
Government mulls linking three northeastern rivers with Ganga
New Delhi, Aug 3
The government is considering
the feasibility of a proposal to link three rivers of the northeast
with the Ganga, union Minister for Water Resources, River Development
and Ganga Rejuvenation Uma Bharti said on Monday.
"...A link,
namely Manas-Sankosh-Teesta-Ganga (MSTG) link is proposed under the
Himalayan Component of the National Perspective Plan (NPP)," the
minister informed the Rajya Sabha in a written reply.
The
Manas-Sankosh-Teesta-Ganga link canal envisages diversion of the surplus
waters of Manas and Sankosh rivers, with supplementation from the
intermediate major streams, "for the benefit of augmenting the flows of
Ganga at Farakka (in West Bengal) and further transfer to water-short
areas of Krishna, Pennar and Cauvery basins and providing irrigation
facilities to the enroute command areas", she said.
Bharti said the pre-feasibility report of the link has been sent to all concerned states for their comments.
She
said the feasibility report could not be prepared as the link canal
passed through the Manas Tiger Reserve in Assam in the Manas-Sankosh
reach and Buxa Tiger Reserve in West Bengal and other forests within the
reach of the Sankosh and Teesta rivers.
"Considering practical
difficulties for surveys and investigations in Manas-Sankosh and
Sankosh-Teesta reaches, the NWDA (National Water Development Agency) has
carried out alternate studies avoiding reserved forest and preparation
of a feasibility report is under progress," she said.
The Manas
river, a trans-boundary river between Bhutan and India, joins
Brahmaputra at Jogighopa in western Assam. The Sankosh too flows down
from northern Bhutan and joins the Brahmaputra in Assam.
The Teesta, considered the lifeline of Sikkim, originates in the eastern Himalayas and joins the Brahmaputra in Bangladesh.
The water of Teesta is a bone of contention between West Bengal and Bangladesh.
