Due to the proposed project of Tapi and Kanhan river flowing from Surat, about 1,23,000 hectares of water in Madhya Pradesh will provide water for irrigation for a new area. Similarly, in Maharashtra too, 34,000 hectares of water will be available to them.
Bhopal, Tapi River is a river in central India, which is located south of the Narmada river which flows west and then found in the Arabian Sea. The length of the river is about 724 km (450 miles) and flows from the states of Maharashtra, Gujarat and Madhya Pradesh. It flows through Surat city of Gujarat.
Tapti River The Madhya Pradesh is in the mutual and its total length is 724 km. It is the second longest west-west river in India after the Narmada river. Tapti moves from east to west and flows from the states of Maharashtra, Gujarat and Madhya Pradesh of India. It flows into the Gulf of the shoulder in the Arabian Sea in Gujarat. There are 14 main tributaries in the Tapti River, with four right shores and ten left -shore tributaries.
The right -shore tributaries originate from the Satpura mountain ranges and include Waki, and Arunavati and Gomai. The left bank tributaries include Nesu, Amravati, Burai, Panjra, Bori, Girna, Waghur, Purna, Mona and Sipna. It originates from the Gavilgarh hills, the Ajanta hills, the Western Ghats and the Satmala.
Kanhan River It is an important right bank of the river Vanganga, which waters a large area south of Satpura mountain range in central India. In its 275 km long river passing through Maharashtra and Madhya Pradesh, it receives its largest vice -Pench river, a main water source for Nagpur metropolis. The Kanhan river departs on the slopes of the hills on the south bank of the Satpura mountain range on the north of Damua and on the west of Junnaradev city of Madhya Pradesh.
Madhya Pradesh Chief Minister Mohan Yadav on Friday spoke to Maharashtra Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis about the Tapti-Kanhan inter-Jodan project between two neighboring states. Chief Minister Yadav said that he had spoken to Maharashtra Chief Minister Fundwis and delivered his messages on the project, which has been pending for the last several years.
“I have told Maharashtra Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis my feelings and he also wants to do concrete work on Tapti and Kanhan rivers projects which have been pending for years with Madhya Pradesh. We are moving and working on this campaign imagined by PM Modi, “he added.
He said that the debate was in the primary phase and the officials of the Madhya Pradesh government have been directed to speed up the preparations for the project.
Chief Minister Yadav said that the Madhya Pradesh government is completing the task of connecting rivers together with the governments of its neighboring states.
“We want pleasant and cordial relations between the states, so we have been moving slowly by solving all the issues that cost years.
Today, we have forwarded a preliminary debate on the plans that have been stuck for many years on our rivers with Maharashtra, “he said in a statement.
Lighting on the benefits of the proposed project, CM Yadav added that it would provide water for irrigation for about 1,23,000 hectares new area.
Similarly, in Maharashtra too, 34,000 hectares of water will be available to them.
“By this, many of our villages and districts will benefit. Overall, our effort is that every drop of river water is used in the national interest, in the interest of farmers, in the interest of the farmers, the urban or rural population or as drinking water for our industries, “CM Yadav added.
The Chief Minister also said that the Madhya Pradesh government has taken a lot of initiatives under the leadership of Prime Minister Narendra Modi and the river inter-association project is one of them.
“We are maintaining the order of sharing the interests of the rivers of our state and neighboring states so that the farmers of our region can get irrigation water, drinking water and enough water for industrialization at the same time,” he added. PM Modi laid the foundation for the ambitious Can-Betwa River-Jodan project in Khajuraho, Madhya Pradesh in December last year. The Madhya Pradesh government has also begun the process of connecting Parvati-Kisindh-Chambal rivers with Rajasthan.