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Shahpur Kandi barrage to be ready by March 31; Ravi water flow to Pakistan to stop

Speaking to a news channel over the weekend, Rana said that the project is a priority for the administration, aimed at providing irrigation to the parched Kandi (dry land) belts of Kathua and Samba districts.

Published on: Feb 17, 2026 06:34 am IST
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The Shahpur Kandi barrage is set for completion by March 31, a move that will effectively plug the outflow of excess water from the Ravi river into Pakistan, Jammu and Kashmir jal shakti minister Javed Ahmed Rana said.

The Shahpur Kandi barrage is set for completion by March 31, a move that will effectively plug the outflow of excess water from the Ravi river into Pakistan, Jammu and Kashmir jal shakti minister Javed Ahmed Rana said. (HT File)

Speaking to a news channel over the weekend, Rana said that the project is a priority for the administration, aimed at providing irrigation to the parched Kandi (dry land) belts of Kathua and Samba districts. “Yes, excess water to Pakistan will be stopped. It has to be stopped,” Rana said in response to a query regarding the project’s impact on cross-border water flow.

The Shahpur Kandi barrage, designated as a national project, was revised after four decades of stagnation following the intervention of Prime Minister Narendra Modi. This follows a broader push by the Centre to fast-track languishing hydroelectric projects in the Jammu region to ensure optimal use of river waters.

The strategic shift in water management gained significant momentum following the Pahalgam terror attack on April 22 last year, which left 25 tourists and a local guide dead. In the aftermath, PM Modi announced a slew of punitive measures against Islamabad, including the suspension of the 1960 Indus Waters Treaty (IWT).

Under the 1960 treaty brokered by the World Bank, the eastern rivers (Ravi, Beas, Sutlej) were allocated to India, while the western rivers (Indus, Jhelum, Chenab) were assigned to Pakistan, with India permitted only limited, non-consumptive use of the latter. New Delhi’s current stance marks a firm departure from past adherence to these terms in favour of maximising national utility.

 

A principal correspondent, Ravi Krishnan Khajuria is the bureau chief at Jammu. He covers politics, defence, crime, health and civic issues for Jammu city.

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