Tamirabarani–Nambiar link canal
Tamil Nadu is one of the drier states in India which depends heavily on water from the rivers originating from the neighboring states of Kerala and Karnataka. The state government has envisioned a project linking the Tamirabarani, Karumeniyar and Nambiyar rivers which should potentially benefit the drier regions of the Tirunelveli and Tuticorin districts of the state. The project is expected to utilise the 13,000 mcft surplus water in Tamirabarani river.[1][2][3]
Project
6,038 hectares of land will benefit by irrigation and 17,002 hectares of land will benefit from the ground water being recharged. 694 hectares of land will be acquired from Tirunelveli district and 106 hectares will be acquired from Tuticorin district for the implementation of the project.
Route
The water will be diverted from Tamirabarani river at the third anaicut at the confluence of Manimutharu and papanasam rivers through the existing Kannadian canal for about 37 km. A new barrage will be constructed 6.4 km downstream to divert the water further which will be linked with Kannadian canal and the new canal will run for about 73 km till it reaches Thisayanvilai near to the Gulf of Mannar. A barrage of several small interlinking canal across this canal is additionally expected to benefit more land.
See also
References
- ↑ Times of India, 16 June 2008
- ↑ Tamil Nadu to take up river linking projects
- ↑ "River interlinking must be a national priority". businessstandard.com. Business Standard. Retrieved 13 February 2016.