Tungabhadra Dam gates inaugurated: Naidu, Shivakumar, Revanth Reddy at Hosapete on June 25
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
Andhra Pradesh Chief Minister N. Chandrababu Naidu, Karnataka Chief Minister D. K. Shivakumar, Telangana Chief Minister A. Revanth Reddy, and Union Jal Shakti Minister C. R. Patil will jointly inaugurate the newly installed crest gates of the Tungabhadra Project on 25 June at Hosapete in Karnataka. The ceremony marks the completion of a ₹51 crore gate replacement drive that revived one of South India's most critical inter-state irrigation projects.
What Triggered the Gate Replacement
The urgency dates to August 2024, when Gate No. 19 of the Tungabhadra dam was washed away during severe flooding, triggering fears of uncontrolled water loss. As an emergency measure, the Andhra Pradesh government — acting on directives from Chief Minister Naidu — installed a temporary 'stop-log' gate to contain the breach. The National Dam Safety Authority (NDSA) subsequently recommended replacing all spillway gates, setting the stage for a full-scale rehabilitation effort.
All 33 Gates Installed in Six Months
Andhra Pradesh and Karnataka worked in coordination to install all 33 crest gates within six months, at a total cost of ₹51 crore, according to an official release issued on Tuesday, 24 June. The swift turnaround is notable given that the dam was built 73 years ago and had not undergone gate replacement of this scale before. Officials described the completion as effectively 'revitalising' the project for decades ahead.
Why the Tungabhadra Project Matters
The Tungabhadra Project is a lifeline for Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka, and Telangana, supplying irrigation water to lakhs of acres of farmland and drinking water to hundreds of villages across the three states. In Andhra Pradesh alone, the project irrigates 1.46 lakh hectares, with water channelled to the districts of Kurnool, Kadapa, and Anantapur via the right canal. The project's safety was treated as a matter of high priority by both state governments given its scale of impact.
Telangana Asserts Its Water Rights
Ahead of the inauguration, Telangana's Irrigation Minister N. Uttam Kumar Reddy on Monday directed state officials to prepare a comprehensive report covering the legal, technical, and administrative dimensions of Telangana's share of Tungabhadra waters. Reddy made clear that there would be 'no compromise' on utilising Telangana's share under the Rajolibanda Diversion Scheme (RDS), signalling that the state intends to actively assert its entitlements even as the two other riparian states lead the inauguration.
Political Backdrop and Invitation
A Karnataka delegation comprising former Minister N. S. Bosuraju, MLA Basavaraju, and MLC Basavanna Gowda met Chief Minister Naidu on Monday and formally invited him to the ceremony. The tri-state, multi-party presence at Hosapete — spanning the Telugu Desam Party (TDP), the Indian National Congress (Congress), and the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) — underscores the cross-political significance of the project's restoration. With water-sharing tensions already surfacing from Telangana, the inauguration is as much a political moment as an engineering milestone.