MP-Rajasthan ink historic Sardar Sarovar pact: CM Mohan Yadav
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
The Chief Minister's Office of Madhya Pradesh announced on Thursday, 9 July 2026 that a historic inter-state agreement has been reached between Madhya Pradesh and Rajasthan over the Sardar Sarovar Project, with Chief Minister Dr. Mohan Yadav stating that several districts of the state will benefit from the pact.
Sharing the development on X, CM Yadav said: 'Madhya Pradesh aur Rajasthan ke beech Sardar Sarovar Pariyojana ko lekar aitihasik samjhauta hua hai' — 'A historic agreement has been reached between Madhya Pradesh and Rajasthan regarding the Sardar Sarovar Project. Several districts of the state will benefit from this.'
Context
The Sardar Sarovar Project is a multipurpose dam constructed on the Narmada river in Gujarat, designed to deliver irrigation, hydropower, and drinking water to riparian and non-riparian states alike. Madhya Pradesh, as the upper riparian state, has long held significant submergence and irrigation claims under the project's framework, while Rajasthan was allocated a share of Narmada waters to serve its southern districts.
The Narmada Water Disputes Tribunal, constituted in 1969 and delivering its award in 1979, fixed Madhya Pradesh's share at 18.25 million acre-feet (MAF) and allocated 0.5 MAF to Rajasthan. Operationalising these allocations has required sustained political negotiation over the decades.
Policy Backdrop
The Narmada Control Authority, established in 1980, was tasked with overseeing the implementation of the Tribunal's orders, including the construction and management of the Rajasthan Feeder canal that carries Narmada waters northward. Inter-state coordination through this body has historically been the primary mechanism for resolving water-release schedules and canal linkage disputes between the riparian states.
Inter-state water-sharing agreements on the Narmada have repeatedly required fresh political impetus to translate Tribunal allocations into actual water delivery on the ground. The latest pact between Madhya Pradesh and Rajasthan follows this broader pattern of federal negotiation that has characterised Narmada governance since the 1979 Tribunal award.
Stakeholders and Impact
Farmers in western Madhya Pradesh stand to gain improved irrigation access if the agreement unlocks pending canal linkages or revises water-release calendars in their favour. On the Rajasthan side, irrigators in districts such as Jhalawar and Baran — which fall within the command area of the Narmada canal network — are among the primary beneficiaries of a more reliable water supply from the project.
CM Yadav's announcement underlines the political significance of the deal for Madhya Pradesh, where agricultural communities in multiple districts have long awaited the full realisation of the state's Narmada entitlement. The reference to 'several districts' suggests the agreement has a broad geographic footprint within the state.
What's Next
The operational details of the agreement — including any revised water-release calendar, new canal linkage proposals, or financial arrangements — are yet to be made public. The pact is expected to come under the purview of the Narmada Control Authority for formal review and implementation oversight.
Both state governments will need to coordinate on ground-level execution to ensure that the benefits announced by CM Yadav translate into measurable improvements in irrigation coverage across the identified districts. How swiftly the agreement moves from announcement to implementation will be the key test of its historic promise.