Technology and financial innovation to drive the Ganga Cleaning Mission

A range of innovative technology and financial innovations will drive the Ganga cleaning program as was deliberated during the three-day India Water Impact Summit, that concluded last week. It was organised by NMCG (National Mission for Clean Ganga) in collaboration with cGanga and saw participations from experts in various fields from 16 countries. Afforestation, biodiversity, urban river management, data harmonisation, development of water bodies, water valuation and market development, financing in water sector and innovation in sewage and sewerage management were the key topics discussed over three days during the summit.

The three-day summit was inaugurated by Nitin Gadkari, Minister of Water Resources, River Development and Ganga Rejuvenation, Road Transport & Highways and Shipping; in the presence of HardeepPuri, Union Urban Development Minister and Dr Satyapal Singh, Minister of State for Water Resources, River Development and Ganga Rejuvenation.

Cecilia Dapaah, Minister of Water Resources, Ghana; U P Singh, Secretary, MoWR, RD & GR; Rajiv Ranjan Mishra, DG, NMCG; Steven Schonberger, Director of World Bank; Maya Kadosh, Deputy Chief of Mission, Israel; Jasper Wieck, Deputy Chief of Mission, Germany; Jozef Drofenik, Ambassador of Slovenia and Dr Vinod Tare, Head – cGanga, were among other dignitaries present on the occasion.

During the inaugural session of the summit, Gadkari announced the successful tapping of the Sisamau Nala of Kanpur, which discharged 140 million litres per day (MLD) of polluted water into the Ganga. The Minister expressed his satisfaction with the work of the National Mission for Clean Ganga (NMCG) on the occasion. Dapaah, Minister of Water Resources, Ghana also committed to take across Africa global innovations that India successfully implements in the Namami Gange programme.

During the valedictory session, UP Singh expressed his satisfaction on the content of the dialogue. He emphasised on the creation of the working groups as one of the major takeaways from the summit. This will help in converting technology to working models.

Rajiv Ranjan Mishra, DG, NMCG, said, “The state wise session was a unique deliberation in this version of IWIS. The ministers from the states and senior bureaucrats discussed the various challenges that they face at the ground level implementation of the programme.”

The suggestions from the experts were: engaging state/urban local bodies in policy planning, incorporating local/traditional knowledge in implementation, encouraging zero liquid discharge, decentralisation and community driven treatment of sewege and effluents. A working group would also take up development of a model Urban River Management Plan which would be looking comprehensively at the interrelation of river and city and connecting people with the city. Denmark offered its support in this matter.

The technology and innovation deliberations attracted 16 leading companies from eight nations in a workshop. Domains and areas ranged from artificial intelligence (AI), Internet of Things (IoT), machine learning (ML) to latest advancements in waste water recycling, reuse and material recovery, waste-to-energy, satellite imagery with very high resolution, sustainable agricultural practices using soil-less membrane farming, run of the river hydropower units and overall areas of technologies supporting circular economy were presented.

NMCG has streamlined the introduction and acceleration of technology deployment through an Environment Technology Verification (ETV) process that allows companies to showcase the success and efficacy of their solutions through a pilot demonstration project. The government is inviting technology solution providers to apply for the ETV programme in the areas of decentralised waste water and industrial effluent treatment, data and information and ancillary services such as solid waste management, sustainable agriculture and hydropower.

Data and information asymmetry has been long identified as the crucial missing link. The summit enabled NMCG to take a leap forward in initiating a number of initiatives in data harmonisation that will develop platforms and approaches to increase interoperability of data being generated by a network of agencies working in the water sector. NMCG invited big data and analytics companies and entrepreneurs to partner with it to develop next generation data solutions that will help policy makers and investors in equal measure with irrefutable and accurate data.

The India Water Impact Summit is an annual event to provide a platform to start a discourse towards understanding water as a natural resource. The efforts may take various forms: data collection, hydrology, e-flows, agriculture, waste water and more.

cGangaGangaGanga RejuvenationNamami GangeNitin GAdkariNMCG
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