The Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation (BMC) has announced a major 24-hour water shutdown across several key wards in Mumbai on December 12 and 13, as the civic body undertakes essential repairs and upgrades to strengthen the city’s ageing water supply network. The temporary disruption is part of a planned maintenance initiative aimed at improving long-term reliability and ensuring equitable water distribution across the city.
According to civic officials, the shutdown will begin at 10 am on December 12 and continue until 10 am on December 13, affecting multiple areas in the western and eastern suburbs. The interruption has been scheduled to facilitate the connection of newly laid pipelines, valve replacement works, and inspections of critical water mains that supply lakhs of households daily. The BMC has identified stretches of the Andheri, Khar, Bandra, Goregaon, Malad, and parts of Kurla and Ghatkopar wards as the major impact zones. Residents in these areas are expected to face either complete supply cuts or significantly reduced water pressure throughout the 24-hour period. Commercial establishments, housing societies, and hospitals in the affected zones have also been advised to store adequate water and activate internal contingency systems.
A senior BMC official stated that the maintenance work is crucial to preventing future leaks, bursts, and unplanned outages that often disrupt large parts of the city, especially during high-demand months. “These repairs cannot be postponed any further. Upgrading the distribution lines now will help ensure smoother and more reliable supply in the long term,” the official said. To minimise inconvenience, the civic body has issued detailed public notices through newspapers, social media platforms, and ward-level WhatsApp groups. Water tankers will be deployed on a priority basis for essential services such as hospitals, emergency facilities, and major public institutions. However, the BMC has clarified that tanker supply for general public demand will be limited during the shutdown window.
The corporation has also urged citizens to use water judiciously before and after the shutdown to avoid unnecessary wastage and overloading of the water network when supply resumes. Housing societies have been advised to plan ahead, check internal pump systems, and ensure overhead tanks are filled before the cut begins. This planned shutdown is part of a larger, phased initiative undertaken by the BMC to modernise Mumbai’s water distribution infrastructure. Over the past year, the civic body has intensified efforts to replace old and corroded pipelines, install advanced flow meters, and upgrade cross-connections across multiple wards.
While the temporary disruption may cause inconvenience to lakhs of residents, officials emphasise that the work is a crucial step toward building a more resilient and sustainable water supply system for India’s financial capital.
BMC Announces December 12–13 Water Shutdown Affecting Key Mumbai Wards Citywide