Pakistani delegation to inspect two Hydroelectric Power Projects (HEPs) under Indus Water Treaty (IWT) | Current Affairs | Vision IAS
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    Pakistani delegation to inspect two Hydroelectric Power Projects (HEPs) under Indus Water Treaty (IWT)

    Posted 25 Jun 2024

    2 min read

    Delegation arrived as a part of Neutral Expert proceedings to inspect Kishenganga (330MW) and Ratle (850 MW) HEP under IWT.

    • Kishenganga HEP: Run-of-the-river hydroelectric project which diverts water from Kishenganga River to a power plant in Jhelum River basin in J&K.
    • Ratle HEP: Situated on Chenab River in Kishtwar district, J&K.

    About IWT

    • Signed in 1960 between India and Pakistan with World Bank being a signatory of it.
    • Treaty allocates Western Rivers (Indus, Jhelum, Chenab) to Pakistan and Eastern Rivers (Ravi, Beas, Sutlej) to India.
    • India is allowed to construct hydroelectric power facilities on tributaries of Jhelum and Chenab rivers with certain restrictions under IWT, 1960.
    • Disagreement between both countries is related to design features of Kishenganga and Ratle HEPs
      • World Bank is not financing either project.
    • It provides 3 Step Dispute Resolution Mechanism viz.
      • Step 1: Permanent Indus Commission is required to meet at least once every year to resolve questions about implementation of treaty.
      • Step 2: Neutral Expert to deal with unresolved differences on water-sharing.
      • Step 3: Court of Arbitration, a Seven-member arbitral tribunal to deal with the disputes.

    Issues with IWT

    • Lack of collaboration and mutual trust between countries. 
    • No regular data sharing as planned in treaty. 
    • Limited to a conflict-resolution mechanism instead of strengthening the interaction, trust and cooperation. 
    • Tags :
    • Indus Water Treaty
    • Kishanganga HEP
    • Ratle HEP
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