2 minConstitutional Provision
Constitutional Provision

Right to Safe Drinking Water

What is Right to Safe Drinking Water?

The fundamental right of every individual to have access to sufficient, safe, acceptable, physically accessible, and affordable water for personal and domestic use.

Historical Background

While not explicitly mentioned in the Indian Constitution, the Supreme Court of India has interpreted the Right to Life (Article 21) to include the Right to Live with Human Dignity, which encompasses the Right to Safe Drinking Water. International recognition came with the UN General Assembly resolution in 2010.

Key Points

7 points
  • 1.

    Constitutional Basis: Derived from Article 21 (Right to Life) through judicial pronouncements (e.g., Subhash Kumar v. State of Bihar, 1991). Also supported by Directive Principles like Article 47 (duty to improve public health).

  • 2.

    Government Responsibility: The State has a constitutional obligation to provide safe drinking water to its citizens. Water supply is primarily a state subject.

  • 3.

    Key Principles: Water must be (a) Sufficient: adequate for personal and domestic use; (b) Safe: free from micro-organisms, chemical substances, and radiological hazards; (c) Acceptable: of acceptable colour, odour, and taste; (d) Physically Accessible: within or in the immediate vicinity of the household; (e) Affordable: should not compromise the ability to acquire other basic necessities.

  • 4.

    Policy Framework: National Water Policy (2012), National Rural Drinking Water Programme (NRDWP, now subsumed under JJM), Jal Jeevan Mission (JJM).

  • 5.

    Challenges: Water scarcity, contamination (chemical, biological, radiological), inadequate infrastructure, poor maintenance, inequitable distribution, climate change impacts, over-extraction of groundwater.

  • 6.

    Quality Standards: Bureau of Indian Standards (BIS) sets standards for drinking water (IS 10500:2012).

  • 7.

    Monitoring: Regular water quality testing, establishment of laboratories, community participation in monitoring.

Visual Insights

Dimensions of the Right to Safe Drinking Water

Mind map showing the key dimensions of the right to safe drinking water.

Right to Safe Drinking Water

  • Availability
  • Safety
  • Acceptability
  • Accessibility
  • Affordability

Recent Developments

5 developments

Launch of Jal Jeevan Mission (JJM) in 2019, aiming to provide tap water connection to every rural household by 2024 ('Har Ghar Jal').

Formation of the Ministry of Jal Shakti (2019) to integrate water management efforts.

Increased focus on water quality monitoring and surveillance, including field testing kits.

Emphasis on source sustainability measures like rainwater harvesting and groundwater recharge.

Technological interventions for water purification and desalination.

This Concept in News

1 topics

Source Topic

Andhra Pradesh Diarrhoea Outbreak Claims One Life, Dozens Hospitalized

Social Issues

UPSC Relevance

Highly important for UPSC GS Paper 2 (Governance, Social Justice, Constitutional Law) and GS Paper 3 (Environment, Disaster Management). Questions frequently cover constitutional aspects, government schemes, challenges, and solutions related to water security.

Dimensions of the Right to Safe Drinking Water

Mind map showing the key dimensions of the right to safe drinking water.

Right to Safe Drinking Water

Sufficient quantity for basic needs

Free from contaminants

Acceptable taste, odor, and color

Physical accessibility for all

Cost should not exceed 3% of household income

Connections
AvailabilitySafety
SafetyAcceptability
AcceptabilityAccessibility
AccessibilityAffordability
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