Karnataka leaders invite CM Naidu for Tungabhadra new gates event
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
The Chief Minister's Office of Andhra Pradesh announced on Monday, 22 June 2026 that former Karnataka minister N.S. Bosuraju, MLA Basavaraju, and MLC Basavanna Gowda personally handed an invitation to Chief Minister Nara Chandrababu Naidu, requesting his presence at the inauguration of new gates at the Tungabhadra Project, scheduled for 25 June 2026.
Context
The delegation visited the Chief Minister to formally invite him to the inauguration ceremony for the new spillway gates at the Tungabhadra dam. The post, originally in Telugu, states: 'ఈ నెల 25న జరగనున్న తుంగభద్ర ప్రాజెక్టు కొత్త గేట్ల ప్రారంభోత్సవ కార్యక్రమానికి హాజరవ్వాలని' — meaning, 'inviting [the Chief Minister] to attend the inauguration of new gates of the Tungabhadra Project to be held on the 25th of this month.' The ceremony marks a significant infrastructure milestone for an interstate project that has served both states for over seven decades.
Policy Backdrop
The Tungabhadra Project, completed in 1953, is a multipurpose dam on the Tungabhadra river in the Krishna basin, jointly serving Andhra Pradesh and Karnataka. It was built under the Tungabhadra Board to meet the irrigation and power needs of then-undivided Andhra Pradesh and Mysore State. Rehabilitation of aging spillway gates has been a recurring agenda in interstate coordination meetings since the 2000s, driven by safety concerns around the ageing infrastructure.
Interstate irrigation projects in the Krishna basin have historically required close coordination between Andhra Pradesh and Karnataka for maintenance, gate operations, and water release schedules. Upgrades to critical structures such as spillway gates are managed through joint boards and form part of routine safety and efficiency measures.
Stakeholders and Impact
The primary beneficiaries of the Tungabhadra Project are farming communities in Rayalaseema in Andhra Pradesh and irrigated districts of Karnataka, who depend on the reservoir for agricultural water supply. New gates improve the reliability and safety of water releases, directly affecting crop cycles and livelihoods for lakhs of farmers across both states. The cross-party, cross-state nature of the invitation underscores the shared stakes in the project's upkeep.
The presence of former minister N.S. Bosuraju alongside sitting legislators Basavaraju (MLA) and Basavanna Gowda (MLC) signals broad political consensus in Karnataka around the significance of this inauguration, reflecting the project's status as a symbol of interstate cooperation.
What's Next
All eyes will be on 25 June 2026, when the inauguration of the new gates is set to take place. Any joint announcements by Andhra Pradesh and Karnataka on funding arrangements or timelines for further modernisation of Tungabhadra infrastructure will be closely watched by irrigation officials and farming communities in both states. The event could set the tone for deeper bilateral cooperation on shared water resources in the Krishna basin.