1. Introduction
Sustainable rural drinking water is a widespread aim in India, and globally, from the household to village, district, state, and national scales. In December 2019, the Government of India launched the Jal Jeevan Mission to provide functional household tap connections for all by 2024 [
1]. This is a highly ambitious goal. As of July 2021, only 40.1% of rural households nationwide had taps, though that number is growing rapidly [
2]. It varies greatly among states, from a high of 100% to a low of 10.6% (
Figure 1). The state of Maharashtra has a record of innovative drinking water programs and is the focus of this paper. It has been reported that 64.3% of rural households have tap connections, albeit with considerable variability across districts that ranged from 38.3–100% coverage (
Figure 2).
Tap connections are important, but they are not the only measure of access to safe drinking water. Do rural households receive the full 55 L per capita per day (lpcd) required by current national standards? Do they receive this amount year-round, or do they require tankers in dry months and drought years? Do villages provide equal service to different classes, castes, and tribal habitations? Do they collect sufficient and equitable water tariffs? Do women and girls still have to fetch water from distant wells or ponds? Is the water of good quality? Maharashtra reports generally good rural water quality, though some 6597 water sources had biological, fluoride, nitrates, iron, hardness, or other contaminants in 2020 [
3]. Are rural water schemes maintained and sustained, or do they “slip back” to substandard levels of service?
These are some of the key questions related to rural drinking water sustainability in India today. It should be noted that India is urbanizing rapidly, and that the boundaries between urban and rural are eroding. The Census of India defined rural places as those having fewer than 5000 residents, less than 75% of the male workforce engaged in non-agricultural activities, and population densities of less than 400 per square kilometer. An increasing number of settlements qualify as rurban or peri-urban. The national standard for rural domestic water service is 55 lpcd; while in peri-urban areas, it is 70 lpcd; and in urban areas 135 lpcd.
India’s Integrated Management Information System (IMIS) reported that 1451 rural schemes in Maharashtra were non-functional in 2020 [
3]. While that number represents less than 1% of the total, it indicates the types of sustainability problems that arise in villages. Sustainability in the rural drinking water sector is defined as the ability of a scheme to deliver a planned level of water service for the design life of the scheme, which is influenced by financial, institutional, environmental, technological, and social factors. The millions of new Jal Jeevan Mission piped-water supplies and tap connections under construction will need to address these sustainability factors in the coming years.
Access to safe and sustainable rural drinking water supplies in India and states such as Maharashtra has been addressed in two broad lines of research. At the larger scale, national and international agencies have monitored drinking water access with aggregate statistical databases such as those cited above. Developed at great expense and effort, these databases track progress toward drinking water goals and help identify problem areas [
4]. In addition to monitoring progress toward universal access, they have been used to identify problems of sustainability in water schemes, known as “slipback”, where projects fail before reaching the end of their design life, and water services revert to substandard levels. A related set of scientific databases in Maharashtra map local water availability, depletion, recharge, and quality, which shed additional light on the environmental sustainability of water sources e.g., [
5].
A second line of research employs qualitative case study methods to identify socio-economic differences in access to safe drinking water and sanitation. It draws attention to systematic inequalities in access based on gender, class, caste, and legal settlement status at the household, village, and urban scales [
6,
7,
8]. Detailed ethnographic studies deal with complex local problems faced in households and small numbers of villages. Although these studies provide valuable insights, they are sometimes difficult to generalize to the thousands of villages in any given district and to the many tens of thousands of villages in a state. Even so, the cumulative weight of qualitative case studies has had important impacts on drinking water policies designed to increase inclusion and empowerment of women and lower caste groups in Village Water Supply Committees and other means [
9,
10,
11]. These steps have led to further evaluation of the actual vis-à-vis nominal significance of social mobilization and participation in drinking water planning. In addition to shedding light on discriminatory practices, this line of critical water research has assessed the local socio-economic impacts of neoliberal policies for water finance, e.g., service fees, volumetric pricing, full cost recovery, and private sector involvement. Those policies strive in principle for financial efficiency and sustainability but can exclude the poor [
12]. Those impacts are increasingly addressed by subsidies, lifeline water rates, and other pro-poor protection policies. These developments have contributed to the reassertion of state support vis-à-vis private sector control, and to hybrid public–private water programs [
13].
In both research literatures—large-scale data monitoring and small-scale case studies—relatively limited attention has been devoted to the intermediate level of water governance at district and block scales [
14]. Districts in Maharashtra are known as Zilla Parishads while blocks are known as Panchayat Samitis. These levels of government collect and assess local data on water sources, access, technical systems, and services on the ground. Local public officials known as Gram Sevaks collect data on villages, known as Gram Panchayats, and report that information to Block Development Officers, who report in turn to District Zilla Parishad headquarters. District water engineers then supervise the preparation of Detailed Project Reports for new schemes to improve village services, tailored to local water sources, infrastructure alternatives, and trends in water demand. Districts and blocks thus operate at an ‘intermediate-level’ between the centralized state and local village scales of rural drinking water planning.
There is a long history of top-down national and state water planning in India and many other countries. In recent decades, water agencies at all scales have declared that greater emphasis should be placed on bottom-up water planning approaches. The water planning literature has given less attention to the roles of intermediate scales of governance. This research on rural drinking water planning in Maharashtra examined all three perspectives: bottom-up, top-down, and intermediate-level planning. In light of recent policy trends, one might expect an increasing role for bottom-up planning. On the other hand, one might expect the legacy of centralized colonial and postcolonial planning to remain strong. Although there is little literature on it to date, one would expect the intermediate scales of districts and blocks to play important roles in aligning local village needs with state and national resources.
This research surveys the full range of bottom-up to top-down approaches. It gives special attention to understanding the current and potential role of intermediate-level planning. Our central argument is that intermediate-level governments can and should play an important role in rural drinking water governance. However, our initial observations on district drinking water planning were mixed. All districts currently prepare Annual Action Plans, as mandated by national and state programs. Those plans take the form of simple spreadsheets that list physical schemes requested by villages or their political representatives. The spreadsheets have no accompanying narrative or rationale for prioritizing projects. They provide limited information on current levels of water service, no explanation for service deficiencies, and little context for proposed projects. They do not specify the villages that need help with financial management, technical support, or community-based water management. Thus, the second argument advanced in this study was that district planning can be strengthened in ways that link drinking water sustainability at the local scale with program resources at the state, national, and international scales.
This research on understanding and strengthening district drinking water planning began in 2015 and continued through 2020. It involved a novel form of collaboration between an independent university-financed research team, the Government of Maharashtra’s Water Supply and Sanitation Department, and the World Bank’s Jalswarajya II (JS2) Project Management Unit based in Mumbai. Strengthing district water planning was one component of the JS2 project. The larger project involved 148 pilot projects in water-stressed and water quality-affected villages and 45 peri-urban villages. It developed a new monitoring and evaluation software system for the Government of Maharashtra.
Affiliation with the JS2 program enabled the district planning research team to work directly with Government of Maharashtra officials to investigate, develop, and refine planning concepts and methods at the state, district, block, and gram panchayat levels. When this research began, rural drinking water planning followed formal
Guidelines written for the National Rural Drinking Water Program (NRDWP), which had been launched in 2009 and revised in 2013 [
15]. As the research ended in late 2019, the Government of India’s Jal Shakti (Water) Ministry launched the entirely new Jal Jeevan Mission, which called for piped-water supplies and functional household tap connections (FHTC) in all homes by 2024 [
1]. The planning research team was able to arrange meetings at the State and District levels to show how methods developed in the JS2 research pre-positioned the Government of Maharashtra to address planning requirements of the new Jal Jeevan Mission.
This paper presents the results of research on district rural drinking water planning in Maharashtra. It begins with a conceptual framework that introduces the three core concepts of “sustainability”, “planning”, and “scale” as they apply to the rural drinking water sector in India and the state of Maharashtra. We then describe the research methods employed. These included district reconnaissance visits and repeat interviews; institutional history and analysis; mobile app survey development and testing; sustainability metrics and prioritization; data cleaning, GIS visualization, and interpretation; and plan formulation. These methods linked new planning tools (mobile app and GIS mapping) with templates for annual action planning and multi-year strategic planning.
The research results section is organized by scale. It begins with findings on bottom-up planning processes at the household and village scales, followed by lessons drawn from the analysis of top-down planning processes at international, national, and state scales. The major new findings involve the intermediate scale of district and block planning, which lie in-between the bottom-up and top-down processes. Those results include the feasibility of using a mobile app tool, a pragmatic framework for prioritizing village needs, GIS visualization, and plan preparation. The discussion section considers these advances in planning theory and practice at the district and block levels, the limitations and constraints encountered, and implications for drinking water sustainability in the Jal Jeevan Mission.
2. Key Concepts and Conceptual Framework
Research on sustainable rural drinking water planning at multiple scales requires an understanding of three core concepts: (1) sustainability, which is the drinking water objective; (2) planning, which is a means for meeting that objective; and (3) scale, which defines the contexts of planning and sustainability. These three concepts have special meanings in the rural drinking water sector in India.
2.1. Sustainability and “Slipback”
We begin with sustainability because it is a characteristic of the initial drinking water situation, and the aim of drinking water planning. India participates in various international sustainable development programs. For example, U.N. Sustainable Development Goal number 6 commits nations to, “Ensuring availability and sustainable management of water and sanitation for all” [
16]. This is the primary sustainability goal in the water sector. At the national level in India, sustainability is conversely related to “slipback”, which is the process by which water systems fail and revert to substandard conditions. Slipback often refers to physical failure, e.g., of a storage tank, pump, or distribution lines. It is also well recognized that causes of slipback involve more than infrastructure failures. A detailed study in Gujarat state by Marianna Novellino [
17] employed the Dutch WASH Alliance’s “FIETS” sustainability framework to identify multiple types and causes of slipback. This study did not apply the FIETS framework directly, but its research questions addressed each component of the FIETS acronym.
2.1.1. Financial
Financial components of sustainability include capital investment to build a water system and recurring revenues to operate, maintain, and replace those assets over time [
18]. In India, major capital investment for larger physical infrastructure, such as deep wells, storage tanks, and pipe distribution networks often comes from the state. Operations and maintenance are local responsibilities that employ various financial mechanisms such as connection fees and monthly or yearly tariffs. Direct and indirect government grants help gram panchayats build and manage local water supply systems (e.g., through 15th Finance Commission Grants, state devolution grants, receipts from property taxes, etc.). Metering is rare but increasing. Financial slipback occurs when residents are unable or unwilling to pay or collect water fees. Unwillingness to pay may indicate problems of system design, management, and/or social inequalities in affordability and service [
12,
19]. In this study, field research questions focused on the adequacy of local connection fees, service fees, estimated O&M costs compared to fees collected, and funds allocated to asset management.
2.1.2. Institutional
The institutional components of sustainability include clear and transparent rules, roles, responsibilities, and accountability of actors involved in water management. These actors range from political leaders to bureaucrats, private entities, civil society organizations, as well as the water users themselves. Institutions may exist formally on paper or be what Elinor Ostrom termed “rules-in-use”, which are unwritten practices [
20]. In either case they need to be sustained on the ground if a water system is to operate for decades, long after it has been designed and built. A widespread institutional challenge in India involves frequent changes in water policies and officers [
21]. At the local level, institutional rules are developed by Village Water Supply Committees (VWSCs), which are sub-committees of Gram Panchayats, but sometimes have limited capacity. Rules are implemented by village water operators, who are often semi-skilled or part-time workers with low wages. Institutional sustainability research questions in this project asked villages to rank their satisfaction with the performance of water operators and VWSCs.
2.1.3. Environmental
Environmental dimensions of sustainability and slipback in the hard rock basalt region of Maharashtra often involve groundwater depletion. Groundwater levels drop as pumping increases especially in irrigated areas. Watershed degradation reduces groundwater recharge. It also accelerates erosion, sedimentation, and flooding. Coastal districts of Maharashtra have problems with saltwater intrusion. Inland districts are drought-prone due to high rainfall variability [
22]. Long-term climate change is increasingly perceived, but it has rarely been analyzed in the Maharashtra drinking water sector [
23]. When a District Collector makes a drought declaration, eight measures are considered to conserve water. When existing water supplies fall below 20 lpcd, the state adopts the eighth option of providing water tankers to reach that minimum standard.
To understand and address these environmental problems, the Maharashtra Groundwater Survey and Development Agency (GSDA) is installing observation wells and analyzing water level data in each village. GSDA has prepared groundwater prospect maps at 1:50,000 scale for the entire state. At the local level, it has published groundwater recharge potential maps for every village. Community-based aquifer management is expanding under the auspices of JS2 and other government and non-governmental efforts. Our field research questions in the environmental category dealt with source water protection, annual rainfall anomalies, months of reliable groundwater water supply, and days of tanker water supply in a year.
2.1.4. Technological
Physical infrastructure is a key aspect of technological sustainability, and it is changing in important ways. A generation ago rural communities relied on handpumps, which were subject to failure or obsolescence, especially in areas of increasing groundwater demand. Attention then turned to community standposts which were supplied by ground surface reservoirs and located within a standard walking distance from residential dwellings. The shift toward piped water supply and tap connections was underway in more prosperous neighborhoods and villages. In 2019, the Jal Jeevan Mission mandated this technology for all households, recognizing that it is not always feasible in especially remote and hilly locations. A typical piped water supply relies upon one or more tubewells or a nearby surface reservoir. Water is pumped through a rising main to an elevated storage reservoir. From there it flows through plastic pipes to different zones of a village, often for an hour each day or every other day. Residents store tap water in plastic water tanks either at ground level or in tanks on their roofs for later use. While piped water technologies provide higher levels of household service, they depend upon higher quality construction, operation, and maintenance—or they slipback [
17,
24]. Common failures involve distribution line breaks, delayed pump maintenance, and water tank failures. Field research questions in this field focused on the frequency and reliability of water service (days per week, hours per day); and the frequency and duration of system failures.
2.1.5. Social
Social factors affect the sustainability of drinking water systems. They include traditions of community collaboration, equity, and effective leadership [
6]. Countering those ideals are inequitable patterns of water service for different caste, ethnic, or class groups; and heavy burdens on women and girl children to fetch water [
7,
8,
10]. Conflicts between different political parties, clans, and family groups also affect the sustainability of local water systems. Some social problems such as caste discrimination are observable in the field but not readily admitted by officials as they are sensitive, illegal, or addressed by other departments. Health problems for women (e.g., spino-muscular problems associated with water carrying) and children (e.g., diarrheal disease) are not included in drinking water databases [
25]. Correlations can be made between levels of water service, demographic, and socio-economic data. Demographic shifts include seasonal migration and the growth of “floating populations”. Estimating population growth rates is reported to be a major challenge for rural drinking water systems. Three methods are used in Maharashtra (arithmetic, geometric, and graphic extrapolation), but they are all based on dated 2011 Census data. Additionally, it is difficult to determine the relative importance of distance, settlement dispersal, and social status for different levels of water service. Field research questions on social aspects of sustainability included estimated population, floating population, and women’s time spent fetching water.
2.1.6. Summary
Taken together, these five topics help assess the sustainability of drinking water systems, patterns of slipback, and criteria for designing more sustainable systems. To date, villages have focused most on the sustainability of groundwater sources and physical infrastructure. Financial and social factors are recognized but not proactively addressed. Longer-term issues of environmental sustainability related to land use, land cover, and climate change receive less attention, though that is starting to change with advances in drinking water planning [
17,
23].
2.2. Planning
Drinking water planning is a hybrid field that involves several subfields in different disciplines. There are few professional rural drinking water planners. Professional planners tend to focus more on urban land use than rural water issues. Although some rural water planners work in universities, there are no formal degree programs, which means that persons charged with preparing plans often lack an understanding of basic planning theory and methods. They draw upon practical experience more than professional training. Rural drinking water planning in India is highly influenced by large scale government financed programs and the guidelines prescribed therein, as well as technical manuals prepared by central and state engineering organizations. That said, several types of planning have relevance for rural drinking water.
2.2.1. Physical Planning
The largest group of water planning practitioners in India come from civil and environmental engineering in middle level positions. Civil engineers have training in applied hydrology, systems design, soils, construction specifications, cost analysis, and contracting [
26]. A generation ago Maharashtra and other states drew as much upon public health engineers for water and sanitation programs as civil engineers. These days, civil engineers take the lead in site planning and design for water supply, drainage, and wastewater systems.
2.2.2. Community-Based Planning
Graduates in the social sciences and rural development provide leadership in community-based planning. This work includes social survey methods, water needs assessment, and social mobilization. Community planners work intensively with villages to identify problems, priorities, local preferences, and constraints [
27]. They may work for NGOs or as public officials. In recent decades, national and state drinking water programs have prescribed active community participation in planning, construction, and maintenance. District offices have employed social mobilization specialists on contract, and have also contracted Implementation Support Agencies, usually NGOs, for community mobilization and capacity building.
2.2.3. Water Resources Planning
This field is dominated by civil engineers and hydrogeologists in bureaucratic organizations responsible for water management, irrigation systems, and groundwater surveys. Their work shapes state policies on water resource estimation and allocation. Drinking water is the first priority use in Maharashtra water policy, though irrigation is the largest and most powerful water use sector. Current policies call for integrated multi-use water planning to address increasing water demand especially in drought years. In practice, different water departments undertake their own planning methods for projects as per their own agency guidelines and available funds.
2.2.4. Financial Planning
Much of the planning in water agencies involves program finance, budgeting, revenues, expenditures, and accounting. Economic planners often have backgrounds in public administration, including the elite national and state administrative services. They focus on allocating scarce resources among projects that address various socio-economic objectives. Notwithstanding the distinguished tradition of economic development planning in India, it is interesting to note that the Indian Administrative Service curriculum does not currently include modules on planning theory and methods [
28].
This research on drinking water priorities contributes indirectly to financial planning. It conducted repeated interviews with bureaucrats, engineers, and community planners to clarify drinking water supply problems, needs, and emerging alternatives. In focusing on district-scale planning the research adopted the principles that: (1) all villages in a district should be considered, rather than a sample of villages; (2) local-village needs should be prioritized based on primary data collected from the villages; (3) village conditions should be rated for ease of comparison and prioritization; (4) these conditions should be mapped with consistent color codes for visual identification of priority villages and clusters; and (5) the respective planning roles of districts and blocks should be clarified and supported.
2.3. Scale
In the rural drinking water context, “scale” refers primarily to “levels” of water management and governance, from the household to village, block, district, state, national, and international levels [
29,
30]. There is emerging concern at the global level as well about effects of climate change on drinking water supply, e.g., by the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel for Climate Change (IPCC). The emphasis on levels of water governance differs from quantitative measures of scale in the hydrologic and ecological sciences (e.g., of hydrologic response in relation to watershed size). We briefly introduce the major levels of water governance here, beginning with the smallest, and say more about them in the results section of the paper.
A significant body of rural drinking water scholarship focuses on the household scale as the smallest level of analysis. It is also recognized that intra-household water roles and burdens vary. The Census of India aggregates household data on water, sanitation, housing and demographics to the village level. The term village has three distinct meanings. It refers at the smallest scale to local habitations or clusters of homes. Officially, it refers to larger gram panchayats, which are recognized as local self-governments under the constitution of India. Gram Panchayats may have one or more revenue villages, which is the level of census data collection and mapping.
Blocks, also known as talukas or tehsils, are larger scale local governments that comprise roughly a hundred villages. Districts or Zilla Parishads are the next highest level. They may have roughly a dozen blocks and over a thousand villages. The 73rd Amendment to the Constitution of India strengthened all three of these local levels of government—districts, blocks, and gram panchayats—which are collectively known as Panchayati Raj Institutions by devolving more subjects to them, including rural drinking water and sanitation.
India has a federal system of government comprising 36 states and union territories. Constitutionally, water is primarily a state subject. The central government retains control over interstate and international waters, as well as water issues of national concern. States have control over all other aspects of water resources planning, which has historically focused on irrigation agriculture, industrial water use, and the scientific agencies that support them. Maharashtra officially devolved drinking water and sanitation responsibilities to local governments over a century ago, but it retained control over large-scale funding programs through its Water Supply and Sanitation Department (WSSD). Notwithstanding many policies aimed at decentralization and devolution over the past century, the Government of India has likewise retained a substantial level of control over planning for local drinking water systems. As might be expected, these dynamic relationships have a direct bearing on the operation of bottom-up, top-down, and intermediate-level planning processes.
2.4. Summary
These three components—planning for sustainability across scale define the conceptual framework employed here for research on the district level of drinking water planning in Maharashtra.
5. Discussion
This study sheds light on the current and potential roles of intermediate-level block and district governments in rural drinking water planning. We found that their current role is driven in large measure by top-down national and state drinking water programs. However, those programs also call for bottom-up expression of village drinking water needs. Districts currently fulfill these bottom-up and top-down policies through annual action plans. Thus, in some measure, the planning role of intermediate-level governments is recognized and actualized. However, there is a long legacy of top-down planning at the national and state levels, the former providing funds subject to compliance with specific guidelines, and the latter controlling appointments, procedures, and resources. There has been less attention given intermediate-levels of water planning.
This research also found that district drinking water planning can be strengthened. Under the 73rd Amendment to the Constitution of India, Panchayati Raj Institutions can assert a bolder planning role and vision, with supporting data and arguments, for their jurisdictions. Key steps for strengthening district planning include: (1) a program of professional training in the theory, methods, and practice of planning methods and plan preparation; (2) focused attention to GIS training and posting of at least one GIS applications officer in each district office; (3) identifying block coordinators in the district office to ensure timely data collection, verification, and analysis; and (4) a renewed emphasis on sustainability and slipback prevention methods in the new Jal Jeevan Mission projects.
Safe drinking water is a key component of sustainability in rural environments. Villages depend upon reliable supplies that often lie beyond their immediate borders and thus require larger planning scales. Drinking water aspirations are expanding to include piped water supply and household taps that deliver more and safer water in ways that tap scarce groundwater and monsoon runoff. These goals require stronger planning at the intermediate level of blocks, districts, watersheds, and aquifers. Fulfilling the JJM guidelines for village action plans, district action plans, and a state action plans depends upon advances in planning methods and practices at each level. It is noteworthy that NRDWP requirements for more comprehensive Village Water Security Plans and District Water Security Plans were not fulfilled. Instead, district annual action plans took the form of functional spreadsheets for financial planning. Planning in the Jal Jeevan Mission also appears to be falling behind schedule in addressing detailed guidance for preparing Village Action Plans and District Action Plans. This due in part to the magnitude of the tasks, limited time and staff to complete them, and constraints posed by the COVID pandemic. National funds disbursed through top-down planning methods follow a strict calendar, and funding proposals must be submitted according to that timeline, which can constrain planning processes.
The new Jal Jeevan Mission piped-water schemes and tap connections, when constructed in the millions, faces serious challenges of sustainability that require proactive planning. Dramatically increasing rural drinking water demand is occurring concurrently with increasing agricultural and municipal and industrial water demand. These sectors interact in ways that sustain, or weaken, water quality standards and governance [
42,
43]. All of these challenges are amplified by climate change. They require a much stronger multi-sector and multi-use approach to water planning, which is an important topic for future research.
The results of this study suggest that block planning is a key scale to strengthen in Maharashtra. Blocks have relatively coherent hydroclimatology and terrain, compared to districts. Although they do not strictly conform with watershed or aquifer boundaries, which deserve greater emphasis in Maharashtra water planning, blocks have several key strengths. They have the staff and data-intensive methods to track local sustainability in hydrologic as well as engineering and socio-economic terms—that is, all five components of the FIETS sustainability framework. To keep track of those components, gram sevaks, water operators, and Village Water Supply Committees would benefit from enhanced training and certification. This research demonstrated that systematic water service data collection by gram sevaks is feasible. When prioritizing village needs, the study gave equal weight to each of the eight main water service variables, as an initial assessment. Future research may consider varying the weights for different water service variables, informed by participatory methods among village stakeholders.
Block scale water planning would require a shift in the Jal Jeevan Mission, Maharashtra state, and GSDA practice. It would require additional staffing and stronger professional development programs and opportunities at the block as well as district levels. This is where district scale planning becomes crucial both for supporting blocks and for aggregating local village data in ways that articulate bold district priorities. District governments have dedicated water sector staff, which is not often the case in blocks. They have district colleagues in groundwater and GIS offices as well, which are crucial at all scales.
We did not find that districts have experience in synthesizing project data into clear narrative plans. Each district has an extraordinarily rich history related to water resources [
44]. Each one faces geographically specific drinking water challenges, and these challenges are changing with the growth of new industries, cities, and agricultural markets. They will encounter unanticipated hydroclimatic hazards that go well beyond current drought emergency management efforts in the Collector’s office and that require multi-year strategic planning that goes beyond the scope of annual action plans.
In the future, it would be wise to shift from individual water subsectors toward multi-use water planning that coordinates drinking water planning with irrigation, industrial, urban, and environmental water uses [
45]. States and districts may choose to follow the national government by creating single overarching water departments. As observed at the national level, however, creating an institutional umbrella is just the first step toward integrative planning. District and block water officers need substantial professional development, vis-à-vis training, to articulate and address complex multi-sector water challenges in district plans prepared for consideration at the state level. Current research on water-energy-food nexus may be useful [
46].
India’s Panchayati Raj Institutions are not likely to attain planning capability to address these challenges in the fast-track schedule of the Jal Jeevan Mission. It may require a generation, but it can be launched and supported as part of the long-term vision of the Jal Jeevan Mission. Planning for sustainability on a generational timescale requires systematic attention to the evolving reasons and remedies for project slipback, as well as progress toward piped water supplies and functional household tap connections for all.