HomeNewsAhmedabad Water Treatment Plant To Expand Supply

Ahmedabad Water Treatment Plant To Expand Supply

Ahmedabad is set to strengthen its urban water infrastructure with the approval of a new 100 MLD water treatment plant at the Raska facility, an ₹80 crore investment aimed at meeting rising drinking water demand in newly urbanised zones. The project is expected to reduce dependence on borewells and address groundwater stress across fast-expanding eastern and south-eastern neighbourhoods. 

Municipal officials indicate that the Ahmedabad water treatment plant expansion has been prioritised as residential layouts continue to grow from Vastral to Kamod following administrative boundary mergers. These areas have witnessed accelerated housing development, road building and civic upgrades, placing additional pressure on the city’s potable water network. At present, many households in these peripheral zones rely on groundwater extraction. Urban hydrology experts warn that sustained borewell use has contributed to falling water tables and increasing salinity in certain pockets. The new 100 MLD capacity is intended to supplement treated surface water supply and gradually reduce unsustainable groundwater abstraction.

The additional plant is projected to serve between five and six lakh residents once operational. Civic planners note that scaling up centralised treatment capacity allows for improved quality monitoring, distribution efficiency and public health outcomes, particularly in high-density residential clusters. Land constraints at the existing Raska site prompted the state government to acquire over 27,000 square metres in a neighbouring village to accommodate the expansion. While the land acquisition cost remains modest relative to overall project expenditure, urban development analysts emphasise that timely land availability is often a critical determinant in water infrastructure rollouts.

The Ahmedabad water treatment plant forms part of a broader strategy to modernise core utilities in step with real estate expansion. Infrastructure economists argue that water security is foundational to sustainable urban growth. Without assured potable supply, property development risks outpacing civic services, leading to long-term stress on aquifers and inequitable access.
Climate variability adds another layer of urgency. With rainfall patterns becoming less predictable, cities are under pressure to diversify water sources and strengthen treatment and storage systems. Augmenting centralised capacity can improve resilience during drought years and buffer seasonal fluctuations.
However, specialists caution that treatment capacity alone will not resolve systemic water challenges. Investments in leakage control, metering, wastewater recycling and rainwater harvesting must complement supply-side augmentation to achieve long-term sustainability.

As Ahmedabad continues to expand geographically and demographically, the success of the new Ahmedabad water treatment plant will depend on integrated planning across land use, drainage and distribution networks. If executed efficiently, the project could reinforce the city’s transition towards more resilient and equitable water governance  ensuring that urban growth is matched by dependable, safe and climate-responsive civic infrastructure.

Ahmedabad Water Treatment Plant To Expand Supply