Karnataka Water Security and Resilience Program (WB-P506272)

Countries
  • India
Geographic location where the impacts of the investment may be experienced.
Specific Location
Karnataka
Whenever identified, the area within countries where the impacts of the investment may be experienced. Exact locations of projects may not be identified fully or at all in project documents. Please review updated project documents and community-led assessments.
Financial Institutions
  • World Bank (WB)
International, regional and national development finance institutions. Many of these banks have a public interest mission, such as poverty reduction.
Project Status
Proposed
Stage of the project cycle. Stages vary by development bank and can include: pending, approval, implementation, and closed or completed.
Bank Risk Rating
A
Environmental and social categorization assessed by the development bank as a measure of the planned project’s environmental and social impacts. A higher risk rating may require more due diligence to limit or avoid harm to people and the environment. For example, "A" or "B" are risk categories where "A" represents the highest amount of risk. Results will include projects that specifically recorded a rating, all other projects are marked ‘U’ for "Undisclosed."
Voting Date
Aug 1, 2025
Date when project documentation and funding is reviewed by the Board for consideration and approval. Some development banks will state a "board date" or "decision date." When funding approval is obtained, the legal documents are accepted and signed, the implementation phase begins.
Borrower
Government of India - Department of Economic Affairs, Ministry of Finance
A public entity (government or state-owned) provided with funds or financial support to manage and/or implement a project.
Sectors
  • Water and Sanitation
The service or industry focus of the investment. A project can have several sectors.
Investment Type(s)
Loan
The categories of the bank investment: loan, grant, guarantee, technical assistance, advisory services, equity and fund.
Investment Amount (USD)
$ 426.00 million
Value listed on project documents at time of disclosure. If necessary, this amount is converted to USD ($) on the date of disclosure. Please review updated project documents for more information.
Project Cost (USD)
$ 606.00 million
Value listed on project documents at time of disclosure. If necessary, this amount is converted to USD ($) on the date of disclosure. Please review updated project documents for more information.
Primary Source

Original disclosure @ WB website

Updated in EWS Sep 13, 2024


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Project Description
If provided by the financial institution, the Early Warning System Team writes a short summary describing the purported development objective of the project and project components. Review the complete project documentation for a detailed description.

According to the Bank’s website, the objective of this project is to improve services, and institutional and financial capacities to enhance resilience to water and climate stress in Karnataka.

ith this Program, the World Bank can leverage international and national lessons on enhancing water security, climate resilience, and DRM and facilitate convergence between six active water-related operations in Karnataka. The current operations include the Second Dam Rehabilitation and Improvement Project (P170873), National Groundwater Management Improvement (P158119), Rejuvenating Watershed for Agriculture Resilience through Innovative Development (P172187), Karnataka Urban Water Supply Modernization Project Additional Financing (P176107), National Hydrology Project (P152698), and National Cyclone Risk Mitigation Project (P144726). This Program will leverage data and experience, from these projects to inform the design of the proposed interventions.

Early Warning System Project Analysis
For a project with severe or irreversible impacts to local community and natural resources, the Early Warning System Team may conduct a thorough analysis regarding its potential impacts to human and environmental rights.

The environment and social risk screening revealed that the likely environment and social effects of the program are moderate to substantial. The main environmental risks are: (a) the substantial occupational safety and hazard risks for workers and communities due to numerous ( approximate 1,000) work fronts for construction of sewers, lining of SWDs within the densely populated in Bengaluru, and potential traffic disruptions; (b) the residual pollution of SWDs discharging into lakes downstream if broken manholes of underlying sewers are not readily repaired as planned; (c) management of solid wastes in the SWDs to be fully integrated into Bengaluru’s overall solid waste management program; (d) minimization of tree-felling; and (e) management of usual construction-related pollution, dust, oil spills, noise, and so on. The social risk rating ranges from moderate to substantial. The key social risks are: (a) potential disruptions to and impacts on livelihoods of communities/vulnerable groups that have, at several locations, encroached upon the existing ‘Right of Way’ that will be used for upgradation of SWD network; (b) risks of disruption, safety and GBV/SEA-SH risks to communities, particularly in congested urban locations wherein nine STPs are proposed on government lands that have already been identified; (c) risk of disruption to citizens if works are not scheduled, planned and implemented with citizen convenience in mind; and (d) inadequate information dissemination and community awareness in disaster management situations.

The E&S contextual risk, including any risks to sustainability is moderate as BWSSB is already constructing 14 STPs in the expanded area of Bengaluru.9 The planned investments under this Program will be undertaken on government land but in congested unplanned locations and could experience implementation challenges. The institutional capacity and complexity risks are moderate although these will be further assessed.

Investment Description
Here you can find a list of individual development financial institutions that finance the project.

World Bank Lending: 426.00 MLN


Contact Information
This section aims to support the local communities and local CSO to get to know which stakeholders are involved in a project with their roles and responsibilities. If available, there may be a complaint office for the respective bank which operates independently to receive and determine violations in policy and practice. Independent Accountability Mechanisms receive and respond to complaints. Most Independent Accountability Mechanisms offer two functions for addressing complaints: dispute resolution and compliance review.

World Bank

Kristoffer Welsien
Senior Water Supply and Sanitation Specialist

Anup Karanth
Senior Disaster Risk Management Specialist

Borrower/Client/Recipient

Department of Economic Affairs, Ministry of Finance, Government of India
Manisha Sinha
Additional Secretary
manisha.sinha@nic.in
Simrandeep Singh
Director
simrandeep.iasjk@nic.in

Implementing Agencies

Revenue Department
Rashmi Mahesh
Principal Secretary
secy.dm@gmail.com

Bangalore Water Supply and Sewerage Board
Rajiv K N
Chief Engineer Projects
rajiv1bwssb@yahoo.com

Bruhat Bengaluru Mahanagara Palike
B. S. Prahallad
Engineer in Chief
eictabbmp@gmail.com

ACCESS TO INFORMATION

To submit an information request for project information, you will have to create an account to access the Access to Information request form. You can learn more about this process at: https://www.worldbank.org/en/access-to-information/request-submission

ACCOUNTABILITY MECHANISM OF THE WORLD BANK

The World Bank Inspection Panel is the independent complaint mechanism and fact-finding body for people who believe they are likely to be, or have been, adversely affected by a World Bank-financed project. If you submit a complaint to the Inspection Panel, they may investigate to assess whether the World Bank is following its own policies and procedures for preventing harm to people or the environment. You can contact the Inspection Panel or submit a complaint by emailing ipanel@worldbank.org. Information on how to file a complaint and a complaint request form are available at: https://www.inspectionpanel.org/how-to-file-complaint

How it works

How it works