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Gosikhurd Project's Deadline Pushed To 2027 As Cost Spirals

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Nagpur: The Maharashtra govt has once again extended the deadline for the completion of the long-pending Gosikhurd Indira Sagar Project, now pushing its final timeline to 2027. Chief minister Devendra Fadnavis confirmed to TOI that while all existing works would be wrapped up by Sept 2026, remaining proposed works will follow and conclude by the end of 2027. Earlier, the govt had set a 2025 deadline for the project.

The project, launched by former Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi in 1988 with an original cost estimate of Rs372 crore, has seen repeated delays and is now projected to cost nearly Rs26,000 crore. A revised administrative approval of Rs25,972.69 crore was sanctioned by the Maharashtra Cabinet on April 21, aiming to accelerate the stalled progress.

Constructed on the Wainganga River in Bhandara district, the multipurpose irrigation project is being executed by the Vidarbha Irrigation Development Corporation (VIDC). Designed to benefit approximately 1.96 lakh hectares of farmland across Bhandara, Nagpur, and Chandrapur districts, it also includes provisions for drinking water, industrial supply, fisheries, and hydroelectric generation.

Fadnavis, who earlier claimed in the state assembly in April 2024 that the project would be completed by 2025, reiterated that the delays were primarily due to the inefficiency of previous Congress govts. "This project could have transformed irrigation in Vidarbha, but persistent neglect by previous Congress govts delayed it," he had said in the assembly.

Documents obtained through an RTI filed by activist Abhay Kolarkar previously revealed that despite being declared a national project and receiving approval from the Central Water Commission's Technical Advisory Committee in 2008, the VIDC created only limited irrigation potential. Originally intended to irrigate 1.90 lakh hectares and projected to create potential for 2.5 lakh hectares, the project was supposed to be completed by 2014.

Multiple sources within the irrigation department have pointed to systemic corruption, political interference, and poor fund allocation as reasons behind the project's stagnation. The Gosikhurd project is widely cited as an example of how mismanagement has turned a potentially transformative development into a financial burden.

Launched in February 1981 and touted as a harbinger of agricultural revival for Vidarbha — a region long plagued by droughts, debt, and farmer suicides — the project has failed to meet expectations more than four decades later. The latest extension is seen as yet another attempt to breathe life into a scheme that once promised a green revolution in Maharashtra's most distressed farming belt.

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