KartavyaDesk
news

Ravi River

Kartavya Desk Staff

Source: TOI

Subject: Mapping

Context: India is set to utilise surplus waters of the Ravi River through the Shahpur Kandi Dam, preventing unused flows into Pakistan.

About Ravi River:

What is the Ravi River?

• The Ravi River is one of the five rivers of the Indus river system, which give Punjab its name (“Land of Five Rivers”).

• It is an eastern river under the Indus Waters Treaty, allocated exclusively to India.

Origin:

• Originates near the Rohtang Pass in Himachal Pradesh.

• Rises at an elevation of around 4,400 metres above sea level.

• Initially flows as two streams — Budhil and Tantgari — which later merge.

Course of the River:

Countries: Flows through India and Pakistan.

Within India:

• Himachal Pradesh (mainly Chamba district). Punjab (Gurdaspur, Amritsar districts). Forms part of the India–Pakistan international boundary before entering Pakistan.

• Himachal Pradesh (mainly Chamba district).

• Punjab (Gurdaspur, Amritsar districts).

• Forms part of the India–Pakistan international boundary before entering Pakistan.

In Pakistan:

• Flows past Lahore. Eventually joins the Chenab River.

• Flows past Lahore.

• Eventually joins the Chenab River.

Tributaries of Ravi River:

Right Bank Tributaries: Siul River, Baira River, Budhil River, and Tant Gari

Left Bank Tributaries: Ujh River and Chirchind Nala.

Other Tributaries / Streams: Bhadal River, Sewa River, Bein and Basantar.

Ravi is a Tributary of: The Ravi River ultimately joins the Chenab River, which is a major western tributary of the Indus River.

Key Features of the Ravi River:

Total length: Approx. 720 km (about 320 km in India) – The river flows through both India and Pakistan, with nearly half its course lying within Indian territory.

Catchment area in India: Around 5,957 sq km – A significant drainage basin in Himachal Pradesh and Punjab supports irrigation and hydropower projects.

• Flow is sustained by Himalayan snowmelt in summer and intensified by heavy monsoon rains from June to September.

• Intense rainfall often leads to high discharge levels, causing seasonal flooding in downstream areas.

Controlled by major dams like Chamera I, II, III and Ranjit Sagar (Thein) Dam – These projects regulate water flow for hydropower generation, irrigation, and flood management.

Shahpur Kandi Dam: A multipurpose project on the Ravi River near the Punjab–J&K border, aimed at utilising surplus eastern river waters for irrigation and reducing flow into Pakistan.

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

About Kartavya Desk Staff

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

All News