Sonowal Marks 12 Years of Northeast Waterways Growth
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
Context
Sonowal's post, tagged #12YearsOfJalmargSeVikas (12 years of progress through waterways), frames the Northeast's river network as one of the defining infrastructure success stories of the Modi government since 2014. He invoked the term 'Ashtalakshmi' — the collective reference to the eight Northeastern states of Arunachal Pradesh, Assam, Manipur, Meghalaya, Mizoram, Nagaland, Sikkim and Tripura — describing the region as India's 'gateway to Southeast Asia.' The minister attached a video to the post, underlining the government's communication push around the waterways milestone.
Policy Backdrop
The inland waterways push in the Northeast has its legislative anchor in the National Waterways Act, 2016, which declared 111 waterways as national waterways, including National Waterway 2 on the Brahmaputra and National Waterway 16 on the Barak river. The Jal Marg Vikas Project, launched in 2014-15, has driven upgrades to fairways, terminals and navigation aids on major rivers, with its scope later extended to Northeast stretches. The Inland Waterways Authority of India (IWAI), the statutory body under Sonowal's ministry, has been the implementing arm for these projects since its establishment in 1986.
Underpinning the cross-border dimension is the India-Bangladesh Protocol on Inland Water Transit and Trade, renewed periodically since 1972, which enables cargo movement via Assam's rivers into Bangladesh. This protocol is central to the government's ambition of using Northeast waterways as cost-effective freight corridors to Bangladesh, Myanmar and ASEAN markets.
Stakeholders and Impact
The primary beneficiaries of the Northeast waterways expansion include Northeast exporters, inland shipping operators and border traders who stand to gain from lower logistics costs compared to congested road and rail routes. The waterways strategy is also a pillar of India's Act East Policy — the strategic framework launched in 2014 to deepen trade, connectivity and security ties with ASEAN nations through the Northeast as a land-and-river bridge. Reduced freight costs on river corridors are expected to make goods from the region more competitive in international markets.
The development of multimodal terminals along the Brahmaputra and Barak rivers also aims to ease pressure on road infrastructure in a region where terrain makes surface connectivity expensive to build and maintain. For local communities, improved river connectivity opens access to markets and public services across remote stretches of the eight states.
What's Next
Attention will now turn to progress on new multimodal terminals along the Brahmaputra and Barak river systems and any updates to India-Bangladesh-Myanmar river transit protocols expected in upcoming bilateral meetings. The government's messaging around the #12YearsOfJalmargSeVikas campaign suggests further announcements on waterways milestones are likely in the near term. How quickly expanded terminal capacity translates into measurable freight volume on Northeast national waterways will be the key indicator to watch.