Water Supply and Irrigation Systems Business Guide
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All 4 Documented Cases
जल आपूर्ति क्षमता उपयोग में कमी (Capacity Utilization Loss)
₹15,000-20,000 crore in lost water supply capacity; equivalent to 30 billion liters daily shortfallIndian urban water systems deliver 20-30% less water than installed capacity due to aging, unreplaced assets. Search results show Indian systems deliver 50-60% vs. 80-85% globally. This capacity loss directly results from utilities failing to replace depreciated assets on schedule.
बिगड़े हुए बुनियादी ढांचे से जल-जनित रोग हानि (Water Quality Failure Costs)
₹45,000 crore annually in water-borne disease costs; utilities face ₹100-500 crore per event in customer compensation for contamination incidents80% of India's surface water is polluted. Aged distribution networks (pipes operating 30+ years past useful life) cause widespread contamination. Utilities that fail to retire and replace depreciated assets per statutory useful lives incur massive health costs and customer compensation.
पूंजीगत संपत्ति की अधूरी जानकारी से निवेश त्रुटि (Undercapitalization Due to Poor Asset Data)
₹2,000-3,000 crore annually in misallocated capital; typical utility loses ₹50-200 crore per 5-year cycle in poor replacement prioritizationAndhra Pradesh study shows water utilities unable to make data-driven replacement decisions. Without proper depreciation accounting per Schedule II, utilities cannot accurately forecast capital needs. This leads to either undercapitalization (deferred critical replacements) or wasteful overspending on unnecessary equipment.
गैर-राजस्व जल (NRW) नुकसान और बिल न किए गए आपूर्ति
₹18,000-25,000 crore annually at national level; 46% NRW in Vijayawada = ₹500-800 crore annual loss per major cityWater utilities in India lose nearly half their supplied water due to leakage in deteriorated distribution networks. Vijayawada reported 46% NRW, indicating massive unbilled and unaccounted water loss. This directly stems from deferred capital asset replacement and poor depreciation planning.