Kaveri
Kaveri
Kaveri
CHAPTER TWO
nil!: l;l!:^ESISOF C A U V L R Y W A I L R D I S P U T E
I. INTRODUCTION
The river Cauvery is one of the seven major rivers of India. It is the
fourth largest river in peninsular southern India after the Godavari, the Krishna
and the Mahanadi. The river Cauvery is a unique gift of the western ghats to
peninsular Southern
southern India. The industrial and agricultural prosperity of Kamataka and Tamil
Nadu could be attributed mainly to the perenial flow of the Cauvery.
The river Cauvery is famous for its traditional santity, picturesque
scenary and its utility for irrigation. The Cauvery is known as the "Dakshina
Ganga" or Ganges or "Bhagirathi of South India". It is one of the seven
sacred rivers of India. In Kodagu district, Cauvery is considered and worshipped
as
"Nada or Kula Devate" (Guardian deity). The whole of its long journey is
considered as holy ground. In both Kamataka and Tamil Nadu the river Cauvery
has been the subject of Myth and Legend and has been celebrated in music,
poetry, literature and folklore.
river.
Nadu,
Pondicherry and Kerala have an interest in the sharing of its water. Still
Kamataka in the upper and Tamil Nadu in the lower reaches are the two principal
co-riparians.
72
bedrock througli westem ghats surrounded by thick jungle and coffee estates in
tlie district of Coorg and Hassan. The Cauvery is joined by the river Konnika
and Sangam at Bhagamandala. River Harangi, the first tributary joins the river
1. Before The Cauvery Water Disputes Tribunal, Statement Of Facts On Behalf Of The State Of
Kamataka. 1990 (Bangalore, Government of Kamataka), pp. 3-5.
2. Map 1: Cauvery River Basin
73
In addition,
smaller tributaries like Kakkabe, the Kadamur and the Kuinmahole also join the
river Cauvery in tliis district.
The
eastwards.
to flow
Cauvery about 19 Kms from Mysore city. Two important tributaries namely, the
Hemavatliy on tlie left bank and tlie Lakshmanathirta on the right joins the river
Cauvery in the expanse of Krishnarajasagar reservoir.
The river Cauvery continues to flow from the reservoir eastwards for
about 15 Kms upto Srirangapatna and then changes its course south-eastwards.
Here the river splits into two arms and flows around this island town and
rejoins at Sangam downstream of Srirangapatna. The river Lokapavanani joins
the river Cauvery after Srirangapatna on the left at its 248th Kms. Another
important tributary, river Kabini which takes its origin in the western ghats in
Kerala, joins the river Cauvery on its right bank at Trimakudalu Narasipura."*
Another tributary Suvamavathi joins the river Cauvery from the riglit
about 25 Kms down stream and the Gundal river joins the Cauvery on the right
side upstream of Dhanagere Anient.
direction and is joined by the river Shimsha from the left below Shivanasamudra.
Here again the river divides itself into two branches and falls through a height
of 91 mts in a series of falls and rapids. The two major falls are "Gaganachukki
and Barachukki''. The fall at Gaganachukki has been utilised for the generation
of hydroelectric power. After the falls the two branches join and before it
3. Before tlie Cauvery Disputes Tribunal. Statement of Facts on behalf of the State of Kamataka,
1990. Op.Cit. pp.1-2.
4. Ibid., pp. 2-3. Also see Mohammed Fakhruddin. "Behind TheCauvery Imbroglio", March of
Kamataka. February 1996, p. 4.
74
reaches Mekedatii. another tributary Arkavathy joins the river Cauvery and
then enters the Stale of lamil Nadu.
journey and forms tlie boundary between Kamataka and Tamilnadu. On the
right bank, another stream Uduthorehalla joins the river Cauvery.^ The major and
medium irrigation projects existing, ongoing and proposed projects in Kamataka
across river Cauvery and its tributaries are shown in the Map.**
3. COURSE OF RIVER CAUVERY AND ITS TRIBUTARIES IN
TAMILNADU
In Tamihiadu, the Cauvery continues to flow eastwards and forms a
boundary between Salem and Coimbatore. The river takes a southemly course at
Hogenakal falls and enters the Mettur reservoir which was constructed in 1934.'
The river emerges from the eastern ghats below the Mettur reservoir and
continues southwards.
reservoir, the river Bhavani joins the Cauvery and from here it takes an easterly
course to enter the plains of Tamilnadu, where it is joined on the right by two
more tributaries, the Noyil and the Amaravathi and enters Thiruchinapally. The
river splits into two branches, the northern branch being called the Coleroon and
the southern branch retaining the parent name.
The upper Anient was constructed in 1836 at this point to
facilitate
diversion of the supplies of the river into the Cauvery delta. The two rivers
join again at 16 Kms below near Srirangam. Again in Thanjavnr district where
the Grand Anient was constructed, further splits into two branches, the Cauvery
5. The course of thq river Cauvery and its tributaries is well presented in Kannada Encyclopedia.
Vol. 4 (Mysore, Institute of Kaimada Studies, University of Mysore, 1972), pp.655-660.
6. Map 2: Cauvery River Basin - Major And Medium Irrigation Projects In Kamataka.
7. MeM'rJ?atnXapa<yty.Js__94_TMC.
75
and the Vennar. These branches intum divide and subdivide into innumerable
smaller branches distributing the Cauvery water in the vast irrigation system and
some branches ultimately find their way into the sea. The branch which retains
the name of the Cauvery enters the Bay of Bengal as an insignificant stream at
Kaveripatnam about 13 Kmsnorthof Tranqubar. The Coleroon river enters the
sea near Chidambaram." The Cauvery river delta, projects and irrigated areas in
Tamilnadu are illustrated in the Map.'
4. Districts covered by the Cauvery Basin
In
Kamat?ika,
the
districts
of
Kodagu
of
Nilgiris, Periyar,
Aima,
76
6. Rainfall
Ouiiiig the Inst (wo seasons, the Cauvery basin area receives inaxiinutn
quantum of rainfall. The average quantum of annual rainfall is estimated to
about 82,269 mm3 (2905 TMC) of water. The volume of average rainfall over
the basin States is as follows."
State
Volume of rainfall
Kamataka
Tamil Nadu
Kerala
Pondicherry
The total availability of water in the Cauvery basin upto lower celeroon
Anicut in Tamilnadu is estimated to 790 TMC. The statewise contribution is.'^
Kerala
3200 Mm3
133 TMC
14.3%
Kamataka
12036 Mm3
425 TMC
53.8%
Tamil Nadu
7139 Mm3
252 TMC
31.9%
(This yield is worked out only upto lower Coleroon Anicut and does not include
the surface flow that accrue from the range in the delta).
77
(^auvciy is
iiciiily
54"o
while
Cauvery basin
includes ragi, jowar, sesame, groundnut, red gram and short duration pulses.
However under irrigation area, rice and sugarcane
In
Tamilnadu, rice is the major crop and specially after the construction of the
Mettur dam two crop system is cultivated. This two crop system is cultivated in
an area of 30% to 40% of the delta and in the remaining area a long duration single
crop of rice is cultivated. Accordidng to report of the National Commission on
Agriculture (1976) nearly 71% of the irrigated crop area in Tamilnadu is under
nee.
8. Soils
Soil and geological conditions have an important bearing on ground water
availability. The relatively porous soils of the delta facilitate the retention of
moisture and the rechange of the river while hard soils in Kamataka allow water
to run off.
Along the Cauvery basin soil types vary. Generally red soil predominates
in the southern Kamataka plateau and in Coimbatore and Salem districts of
Tamilnadu. While the clay red soil found in Coimbatore is fertile, sandy soil
13. Ibid., pp. 36-38.
78
found in parts of Mysore plateau does not retain moisture well and are unable
to sustain pood crop after the main rainy season. The best soil endowment,
loamy alluvium is found in some parts of Mysore but mainly in the belt along the
river in Tiruchinapalli district and in the Thanjavur delta. In the coastal areas,
soils are less fertile on account of salinity.
III. ORIGIN OF THE CAUVERY WATER DISPUTE
The
dispute
the
Cauvey
water between
differs from other major river water disputes in India, including those relating
to the Narmada, the Krishna and the Godavari. While these disputes were mainly
about tlie inter-state utilisation of hitherto untapped surplus waters, the dispute in
the case of the Cauvery relates to the re-sharing of waters that are aheady being
almost fully utilised in tlieir totality.'"*
The State of Tamilnadu has been using Cauvery waters right from ancient
times. It has been mentioned in "SHABDA MANI DARPANA" - a Kannada
Grammar Book, dating back to 13th century.'^ The Cauvery
Water dispute
between Kamataka and Tamilnadu dates back to historical period. Cauvery was a
vexed problem between the Hoysala and Chola Kingdoms. To settle score with
Chokkanath Naik of Madurai Kingdom, Chikkadeva Wodeyar of
Mysore
attempted to stop the flow of Cauvery into Tamil region by building a mole
across the river in the 11th
79
while Kamataka unfortunately had no such advantage. The history of irrigation
development in Cauvery basin goes back to 2nd century A.D. when the Grand
Aiiicut is reported to have been constructed across Cauvery by KarikaJa Cliolan.
It has a very large canal system, with 36 distributaries covering a total length of
1600 Kms, 1500 main Channels are fed covering 5600 Kms length and 28000
branches and sub-channels supplying water for irrigating a total length of 19000
Kms. It covered over 14 lakh acres accounting for 47 per cent of river and
canal irrigation of entire Tamilnadu.
Right from the beginning, development of irrigation in Kamataka was
through tanks and Anicuts only. Due to several wars between the Mysore and
Madurai kingdoms, a number of tanks had been destroyed in the Mysore
region.
initiated a few irrigation works in the Cauvery basin in 1800 A.D, which the
Madras province did not favour."'
For Tamilnadu, tlie major problem in the earlier period was, in fact, not
so much one of supply as of abundance, since the unrestrained flow of the river
made die delta prone to frequent floods.
The
17. S. Guhan, The Cauver>' Water Dispute - Towards Conciliation, Op. Cit.. p.2.
18. Revathi Shivakumar, "But Unquiet Flows The Cauvery", Op. Cit.
19. Arthur Cotton (1803-1839) was responsible for the planning and e.xecution of a number of
major irrigation works in South India, notably the upper and Lower Anicuts and the
Dowlcshwaram Anicut across the Godavari.
80
the Krishnaraja Sagar reservoir, serious floods were recorded in tlie Cauvery in
1858, 1896, 1906, 1911, 1920 ami 1924.^"
and
the then
Madras
Government objected to these developments on the ground that they had acquired
easementary rights and these rights would be affected
if the Mysore
Government were allowed to build new irrigation works in the Cauvery basin.
This contention was strongly rejected by the memorandum submitted to
the then Resident of Mysore, by Sir Seshadri Iyer, the tenth Dewan of Mysore.
He pleaded that it was "collect and store casual and intermittent supply of rain
water which falls upon the Mysore lands." He further stated that one of the
fundamental rules of the general principles of law is that a state has a greater
right of control over water falling on the surface of its own lands and entering
into a defined chamiel than it would in a case of streams rising outside its
frontier and merely flowing through it.^' In fact, even Colonel Sankeys, in his
letter favoured Mysore where he viewed Mysore's developments as nothing but
a new method of securing what tlie old system secured in a different way (old
tank system).
But during (his period, Madras was a British
Province
directly
81
enjoying a more powerful political status. The relationship between the two
was similar to that of a sovereign power and a feudal unit. Because of these
reasons, the then
British
Govermnent
favoured
Madras.
In 1890, the
representatives of both Mysore and Madras met in a conference to sort out the
differences. Due to a number of conditions posed by Madras which adversely
affected tlie development of irrigation in Mysore,
took place
between the two Governments, which ultimately led to the General Agreement
of 1892.
IV. INTER-STATE AGREEMENTS OF 1892 AND 1924 ON CAUVERV
RIVER WATER
A. BACKGROUND TO THE AGREEMENT OF 1892
As
between
Madras
and
Mysore on the latter's use of waters in the Cauvery and in its tributaries.
1 his
was the period (1800-1810) when a number of minor irrigation works were
initiated in Mysore. During 1831-1881, when the Mysore administration was
taken over by the British, schemes for irrigation development continued and a
Public Works Department was established in 1856.
In
the restoration,
82
rainful over the Mysore Plateau and to secure the whole of the territory against
drought and famine. This plan was approved by the Government of India and
the Secretary of State in 1872. A separate department of irrigation was created to
implement the plan. However financial stringency and the famine that followed
in 1877-78 prevented the plan from being carried forward.
lower riparian. In 1870, the Madras Government voiced its concern with the
Mysore Government. In the years
exchange
that
witli the Madras Government in 1892, inspite of the plea of the then Dewan of
Mysore Sri Seshadri Iyer.
1892 AGREEMENT
The Agreement is entitled, "Rules defining the limits within which no
new irrigation works are to be constructed by Mysore State without previous
reference to Madras Government." This Agreement consists of only six rules.^''
The title itself indicates that this Agreement imposes restrictions on
Mysore without any corresponding obligations on Madras. Apartfi"omimposing
severe restrictions on Mysore on the utilisation of waters of river Cauvery and
its tributaries for development of irrigation, the 1892 Agreement made it
practically obligatory for Mysore to obtain prior consent of the then Madras
Presidency before taking up any irrigation works. No corresponding restrictions
24. For a fiill text of the 1892 Agreement, see Appendix HI. Only the relevant portions of the
1892 Agreement are recalled here.
83
were imposed on Madras. The terms of Agreement gave the lower ripanion
states a veto power over all the irrigation works of an upper riparian state
whether or not it suffered any damage.
Rule II of the Agreement provides, that the Mysore Government shall
not without previous consent of Madras Government, construct any new reservoir
in schedule 'A'. Schedule B'^^ is a long list of streams specifying points below
which no irrigation works are to be imdertaken by Mysore.
Rule III states that, when the Mysore Government desires to construct
any "New Irrigation Reservoir" or any new Anicut requiring the previous
consent of the Madras Government under the last preceding rule, the full
information regarding the
84
The reason for Mysore accepting the unequal, one sided Agreement of
1892 could be found in the Constitutional position which Mysore was occupying
under the then British Government.
It was
being
controlled by a British
Resident. He was the real ruler of the State. As Panikar rightly writes, "all
those who have direct experience of Indian States know that the whisper of the
regency is tlie tliunder of tlie States and there is no matter on which the Resident
does not feel qualified to give advice. His advice was usually an order or a
command. "^^ At the same time, Madras Presidency was administered by a
Governor. His position in the pohtical set up of the country in those days was
only next to the Governor General. When compared to a Governor the status of a
Resident was quite inferior. Even the Dewans in those days were appointed with
the approval of Government of India.
In course of time both Mysore and Madras realised that the 1892
Agreement was against their interests. Mysore felt that irrigation development in
its territory was subjected to undefined Prescriptive Right of Madras.
While
Madras felt that it had been deprived of any share in available surpluses over and
above its Prescriptive Right which might remain un-utilised for a long time and
thereby form part of its entitiement under the common law of natural flow. The
1892 Agreement thus left much scope for conflict.
B. CIRCUMSTANCES LEADING TO 1924 AGREEMENT
After signing the 1892 Agreement, no signiiicant irrigation development
took place in the Mysore State. It was in 1900, that Mysore mooted the first
proposal under the 1892 Agreement to set up a hydroelectric station at
Sivasamudram to supply power to the Kolar Gold Fields.
Since it was a
85
to
better
clearance of the first stage of the Kannambadi Project retaining the option to
27. K.S. Munnegowda, "The Cauvery Water Dispute", in V.K. Natraj, M.N. Sastry, Ed, New
Perspectives in Centre-State Relations in India, Op. Cit.. p. 283.
28. For histories of the Cauvery - Mettur Project, See C.G.Barber History of Cauvery-Mettur
Project (Madras, Government of Madras, 1940) and S.Y. Krishnaswamy, Rural Problems in
Madras Presidency (Madras, Government of Madras, 1947).
86
take up tlie second stage at a later stage. While consenting to the first stage
of tlie Kannambadi project, Madras objected to tlie second stage of construction
on tfie plea that it would affect the existing irrigation in tlie Cauvery delta. Madras
also urged the Government of India to delink the Government of India's clearance
for the Madras Project,fi-omMadras concurrence with the Mysore Project.^'
The Government of India was not willing to delink the two proposals and
prefetTcd the differences between Mysore and Madras to be settled bilaterally.
This was found to be not possible during the exchanges since 1910 onwards.
Thereupon in 1913, the Government of India appointed a Court of Arbitration
presided over by Sir.Henry Griffin, judge of the Allahabad High Court. He was
assisted by Nethersole, Inspector General of Irrigation in India.
The Award of
the Court known as the "Griffin Award" was given in 1914. It interpreted the
1892 Agreement
to
entitle Madras
prescription and as were fair and reasonable, and held that a 20 year period
was requisite to earn a title by prescription. It found that the construction and
working of the proposed Kannambadi reservoir to its full height (124 ft) and
capacity (41.5 TMC) would not necessarily interfere with the prescriptive
rights of
Madras for its existing irrigation at 22,750 cusecs equivalent to a gauge reading
of 6.5 ft at the Upper Anient. The arbitrator held that the scheme of regulation
could be reviewed, revised and readjusted by mutual agreement.^"
The "Griffin Award" was not accepted by the Madras Government
which went on representation against it to the Government of India (GOI) in 1915.
The representation stated that Madras should be assured of a higher inflow at the
29. H.M. Channabasappa, Water Rights And Cauvery Dispute, Op. Cit.. pp. 16-17.
30. The Cauvery Arbitration Award. 1914 (Mysore Representative Assembly Proceedings), p. 27.
87
Upper Anicut (26,750 cusecs and 7 ft on the gauge instead of 22,750 cusecs and
6.5 ft allowed in the Award).
which under the Award was diflerent from that proposed by either party, should
be modified to one acceptable to both and that tlie Award afforded inadequate
protection to Madras in respect of surplus waters of the river and of future
extensions of irrigation.
It may be noted that at tiie time of the pronouncement of the Griffin
Award, die totd area irrigated in die Cauvery valley of the Mysore territory was
115,000 acres but the corresponding area in the lower reaches of the river within
the Madras State was 225, 500 acres. Further a large surplus flow into the river
goes to waste into the sea year after year, after meeting the needs of both Madras
and Mysore irrigation. The Mysore project was, intended to share only a small
portion of this surplus. Madras wanted not only the continuous flow of enough
water to meet its existing demand, but sufficient enough to fill a fiiture reservoir at
Mettur and to use it to extend irrigation to 300,000 acres of new area in the
Cauvery basin.''
The Government of India did not accept the contentions of Madras and
in 1916 conveyed its decision to ratify the Award without modification. The
Madras Government went on appeal to the Secretary of State against this
decision. In 1919, after consulting independent expert opinion, the Secretary of
State decided on procedural and substantive grounds, that there was a prima facie
case for not ratifying the Award, thereby upholding the appeal of Madras.
The Secretary of State then gave the Mysore Government one of three options
including (i) to appeal against the Secretary of State's decision, (ii) to enter
fresh arbitration or (iii) to arrive at a negotiated settlement with Madras.^^
31. M. Visveswaray>a, Memoirs Of My Working Life (Bombay. Caxton Press, 1951), p. 46.
32. Mysore State Gazetteer. Mandya District (Bangalore, Goyemment Press, 1967), p. 113.
88
The political status of native state was not one of real autonomy even in
inlcnial matters.
economic
not
the
Anient over the limit flow could be impounded by Mysore, with the forecast
flow at the Upper Anient to be estimated by applying a seasonally varying
proportion factor to the flow into KRS.
The significance of the 1921 draft rules was that they, for the first time
gave operational content to the "Prescriptive Right" of Madras. This was done
in terms of the formula for impounding flows at KRS only after liinit flows at
the Upper Anient were ensured. However, it must be noted that the regimen
of the rules did not guarantee any minimum or assured quantity of water at the
Upper Anicut. The limit flows at KRS assumed only that the natural flow upto
33. The Chief Engineers who took part in the 1920 negotiations were S. Cadambi, Chief Engineer,
Mysore and W.J.J. Howley, Chief Engineer, Madras. They were assisted by J.R.J.Ward,
Inspector General of Irrigation, Government of India.
89
the limit would be available to Madras and that only flows above this threshold
could be impounded by Mysore. On a day-to-day basis when natural flows
happened to be below the limit, Madras had to be content with a lesser quantity,
on days when they were above the limit, the surpluses could be fully unpounded
and retained by Mysore and need not be drawn down to make good the deficit in
subsequent days of naturally deficit flows.^
The draft rules were not acceptable to Mysore. The main objections
tliat were raised related to two clauses. Firstly, the proposed rules of regulation
were to prevail over the 1892 Agreement in the event of conflict betweem the
two. The second stated that nothing in the proposed rules should be construed as
in any way restricting the grounds on which the Government of Madras might
claim to withhold consent to the construction of any new irrigation reservoir or
any new Anient. Madras on the other hand was not content with the "Prescriptive
Riglit" being assured. It wanted a share on "Equitable Basis" of all the surpluses
of the Cauvery basin.
These
Madras:
K, Srinivasa
successive
Ayyangar,
90
includes rules and regulations accepted by the Chief Engineers of the two sides
in July 1921. The rules became part of the Agreement. The right of the Madras
Govenmient to extend irrigation work on the tributaries of the Cauvery was
preserved.
it took mto
consideration the effect of the interests and rights of the French Territory also.
Elaborate rules and regulations of KRS reservoir, which was then under
construction have been set out as an annexure to the 1924 Agreement. This
covers aspects such
as guage
readings,
impoudnig
formula,
inflow
37. For a fall text of the 1924 Mrecment see Appendix IV. Only the relevant portions of the
1924 Agreement are discussed here.
38. Financial Express.. 9 August 1991.
91
3.
4.
construct an off set reservoir of capacity not exceeding 60% of the new
reservoir constructed by
Madras.
diminish the supplies to which Madras and Mysore are entitled under this
Agreement including die divisible surplus.
9.
by
both
Governments set out shall after the expiry of 50 years (in 1974) be opened
to reconsideration in the
92
areas.
The 1924 Agreement shows that the Madras Government at that time was
more powerful than the Mysore Government.
Cauvery Dispute between Princely Mysore and Madras Presidency, settled in 1924
was a dispute between British India and the other was a dependent Princely State
under the British suzerainty. 1 he dispute was not settled by the application of
law, but through the authoritative decision of the sovereign power or the British
crown."""
V. IRRIGATION DEVELOPMENT IN POST 1924
In Mysore, irrigation from major and medium works under the Cauvery
which was 1.1 lakh acres at the beginning of the century increased to 3 lakh
39. N.D. Gulhati, Development Of Inter-State Rivers: Law And Practice In India (New Delhi,
Allied Publishers, 1972), p. 113.
40. F.J. Berber, Rivers In International Law (London, Stevens and Sons, 1959), pp. 180-181.
93
acres by 1930 with the extension of irrigation under the KRS. By 1970, it had
further risen to about 4.4 lakh acres. About half of this increment of 1.4 lakh
acres was contributed by new irrigation from small reservoirs,
Anicuts and
channels on the tributaries, and the other half by extension of irrigation under the
KRS Anient and Channels.'"
As a result of Post-Independence recognition of political units some
Princely States got merged with the neighbouring states and through the States
Re-organisation
Act,
states were
also
changed. Thus the erstwhile Princely State of Travancore became part of Kerala
and Mysore became Kamataka and after bifurcation of Madras, Tamilnadu
became the successor of Madras in regard to Cauvery matter.
In Tamilnadu, ayacut development in this period was more fast and
significant.
The first plan projects were the Lower Bhavani Project (covering 2.1
lakh acres) and the Mettur Canal Project (0.5 lakh acres). The three Second Plan
projects,
New
Kattalai
High Level
Pullambadi Canal were to add about 0.2 lakh acres each. Mysore objected these
new projects on the ground that they were not permissible under the 1924
Agreement. Madras maintained that irrigation from the Mettur Canal was within
the acreage limit allowed for the Cauvery-Mettur project. The other two projects
were cleared by the Planning Commission on the assurance of the Madras
41. Achutha Menon, The Hindu. 23 April 1970 and 15 May 1970.
94
Government that these projects would utilise only surplus waters or waters saved
by economy and would not entail the creation of any new prescriptive rights.
Overall, the Mettur and other 1934-72 projects added 6.4 lakh acres to
the pre-Mettur extent of 14.4 lakh acres.
crop was increased to a total extent of 4.5 lakh acres of this, 2.5 lakh acres was
located in the old Cauvery delta, 0.8 lakh acres in the Coleroon system, 0.8 lakh
acres under the canals in Salem and Tiruchinapalli districts and 0.4 lakh acres in
the Bhavani and the Amaravathy sub-basins. Madras did not seek any extra waters
on account of extensions to irrigation beyond what had been assured to it under
the 1924 rules of regulation.'*^
The Kamataka Government under its development plans took up
constructional work on some irrigation projects to utilise its share of water
under the 1924 Agreement. Work on the Kabini reservoir was commenced in
1959, although the project had been discussed in 1933 itself.
Later projects began with dams and reservoirs on tributaries including the
Harangi (1964), Swamavathy (1965), the Hemavathy (1968), the Varuna Canal
(extension from KRS, 1979) and the Yagachi (1983).
potential under these schemes upto 1990 was expected to be about 13 lakh
acres with actual established irrigation until then being 11.2 lakh acres.
The contention of Tamilnadu is that the projects undertaken by Kamataka
aie not within tlie stipulated limits and were ui excess of tlie allowances made
in the 1924 Agreement for newirigation m Kamataka. It also opined that the
42. S.C. Jain, Alice Jacob, Subhas C. Jain. "Inter-State Water Disputes In India", Indian Law
Institute Journal. 1971, p. 48
43. S.Gnhan, The Cauvcry River Dispute - Towards Conciliation Op. Cit.. pp. 18-19.
95
new projects under taken by Kamataka would reduce the assured supplies to
Tamilnadu through limit flows from KRS and that the 1924 Agreement covers
storages
in
they
do
prescriptive right.'*'*
Owing to laiiiilnadu's objections, the above projects were not cleared by
the Central Water Commission or by the Union
inclusion under Plan Schemes in
Planning Conmiission
for
met from non-Plan allocations and Kamataka argues diat this has resulted in
loss of Central assistance, improper funding and execution delays. Along with
requirements of 85.2 TMC ft for minor irrigation, 50 TMC ft for water supply
and 7 TMC ft for power peojects, Kamataka has projected its requirements at
465 TMC ft.
The development of major and minor irrigation in Kamataka upto 1990 is
as follows:
96
TABLE 1
SI.
No.
1.90
1.96
57.7
61.2
0.59
15.6
4.45
134.5
1959
1965
1968
1979
1979
1983
12.93
4.47
0.07
7.01
0.80
0.05
0.53
139.5
65.0
3.6
54.7
10.5
1964
1970
2.58
1.35
1.23
34.4
18.0
16.4
1926
B. in 1971 (A+1+2)
C. Projects since 1971 on
Schedule rivers
(existing/ongoing)
1. Kabini
2. Swamavathy
3. Hemavathy
4. KRS Varuna Canal
5. Modernisation of KRS
6. Yagachi
D. Other Projects since 1971
(existing/ongoing)
1. Harangi
2. Other projects
E. Total of existing and on-going
projects (B+C+D)
5.7
19.96
308.4
F. Proposed Projects
1 42
14.4
1. KRS Extension
2. Otlier projects
1.12
0.30
8.2
6.2
21.38
322.8
SOURCE:^^
45. Government of Kamataka. 1992.
97
of Dharmapnri,
Salem,
and minor
98
1.11
1.11
4.42
27.2
27.2
110.2
21.38
322.8
13.45
14.44
25.30
25.80
366.9
391.2
494.6
501.5
There has been growth in terms of area and utilisation in Kamataka since
1970s.
utilisation in Tamil Nadu in this period, with the fall in the inflow and Mettur in
post 1970s and specially in 1980s. The share of Kamataka in utilisation in the
yield above Mettur has increased during this period.
illustrates this:
99
TABLE 4
UTILISATION OF THE CAUVERY WATERS IN KARNATAKA AND
TAMILNADU
1934-70
1970-80
1980-90
22.9
27.6
42.2
76.4
71.6
57.1
Share of Kamataka's
utilisation in yield above
Mettur (per cent)
28.7
36.8
54.7
378.4
324.6
229.0
70.7
62.6
47.7
Utilisation
SI.
No.
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
SOURCE: 'IS
In
"reassessment" and
of ad-hoc releases
water in KRS and in the new reservoirs including the Swaraavathy (1973), the
Kabini (1975), the Hemavathy (1978) and the Harangi (1979).
48. Government of Kamataka (1990) and Government of Tamilnarfn (1990)
100
49. Such ad-hoc releases have been (in TMC ft) 60 in 1976-77, 25.4 in 1982-83, 5 in 1983-84,
17.1 in 1985-86, 11.4 in 1986-87, 4 in 1987-88, 10 in 1988-89 and 5 in 1990. Cited in
S.Guhan, The Cauvery Water Dispute - Towards Conciliation, Op. Cit.. p. 24.