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India-Bhutan Trans-Boundary River Cooperation

Kartavya Desk Staff

Source: TI

Subject: International Relations

Context: An Indian delegation led by the Secretary of Water Resources, visited Bhutan to strengthen bilateral cooperation on trans-boundary rivers.

About India-Bhutan Trans-Boundary River Cooperation:

What it is?

• India and Bhutan share a unique and deep-rooted partnership centered on water diplomacy.

• This cooperation involves the joint management of river basins that flow from the Himalayas in Bhutan into the Indian states of Assam and West Bengal.

• It covers three main pillars: hydropower generation, flood management, and technical data sharing.

Major Rivers Flowing Through:

Several perennial rivers originate in the Bhutanese highlands and serve as the lifeline for both nations:

Manas River: The largest river system of Bhutan; it meets the Brahmaputra in Assam.

Sankosh River: Forms the border between Bhutan and India in certain stretches.

Wang Chhu (Raidak): Supports multiple major hydropower plants.

Amo Chhu (Torsa): Flows into West Bengal.

Punatsangchhu (Sankosh tributary): Currently the site of massive joint infrastructure development.

Major Projects:

The Hydro-diplomacy between the two nations has resulted in several iconic projects:

Punatsangchhu-I & II: Massive 1,200 MW and 1,020 MW projects (respectively) being implemented with Indian assistance.

Chukha Hydropower Project: The first major project (336 MW), which became a gold standard for bilateral cooperation.

Kuri Chhu & Tala Projects: Essential contributors to Bhutan’s export revenue and India’s power grid.

Mangdechhu: A 720 MW project recently handed over to Bhutan, known for its high efficiency.

Key Features of the Partnership:

Hydro-Meteorological Network: India supports a network of observation stations in Bhutan to provide real-time data on water levels.

Flood Forecasting: Joint mechanisms to provide early warnings to downstream Indian states (Assam and West Bengal) during the monsoon.

GLOF Monitoring: Enhanced focus on monitoring melting glaciers to prevent Glacial Lake Outburst Floods that threaten both nations.

Capacity Building: Indian agencies like WAPCOS Ltd. provide technical expertise and training to Bhutanese engineers.

Significance:

• Hydropower is the largest contributor to Bhutan’s GDP and its biggest export to India.

• Provides India with clean, renewable firm power to balance its national grid.

AI-assisted content, editorially reviewed by Kartavya Desk Staff.

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Articles in our archive published before our editorial team was expanded. Legacy content is periodically reviewed and updated by our current editors.

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