NGT slams gaps in groundwater regulation in Maha, forms panel

NGT slams gaps in groundwater regulation in Maha, forms panel
Mumbai: The National Green Tribunal has pulled up states, including Maharashtra, for inadequate action against illegal groundwater extraction and poor implementation of central guidelines, warning that urgent corrective steps are needed to prevent further depletion.Hearing a suo motu case based on a report forecasting a sharp decline in India's groundwater levels, the tribunal noted "lapses" by states and UTs in regulating usage and ensuring recharge. A compilation by Central Ground Water Authority (CGWA) revealed that Maharashtra has eight overexploited groundwater units (2.2%) and has identified 164 illegal groundwater extraction structures, with environmental compensation of Rs 4.4 crore collected till March 2025. The tribunal, in its April 23 order, observed that despite the Centre's guidelines issued in Sept 2020 to regulate groundwater extraction and impose environmental compensation, enforcement remains weak across states. "No effective steps have been taken" in several regions to levy penalties or curb illegal drawing, it said, pointing to gaps at the ground level. NGT also constituted a high-level committee to identify lapses, recommend measures to curb overextraction and suggest groundwater recharge strategies, especially for critically stressed areas, and submit a report in three months.
The next hearing is scheduled for Aug. For Mumbai and the wider Maharashtra region —where groundwater remains a critical buffer during water cuts and monsoon variability—CGWA's findings underline persistent regulatory and monitoring challenges. The data shows that district magistrates act as the primary enforcement authorities, but the tribunal indicated that institutional mechanisms are yet to deliver consistent results. Groundwater activist Suresh Kumar Dhoka said ideally, the number of illegal users and the amount collected as fines should have been 50% higher and hoped that the govt machinery will now act tougher on violators.
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About the AuthorChittaranjan Tembhekar

A journalist with nearly 30 years of experience, Chittaranjan has been writing in-depth impactful news stories on infrastructure, environment, energy, liquor, tourism, mobility, ports, hospitality, telecom and petroleum besides covering administrative, political, legislative and policy-related issues at the state and central government levels.

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