₹2.77 trillion, with the central government's share being ₹76,760 crore for five years till FY26. The mission is aimed at making Indian cities ‘water secure’.
The scheme entails offering affordable water and sanitation services, advancing functional tap connections across households, and emphasizing water conservation, among other things. "The program also envisages integrated urban planning reforms to control urban sprawls and foster systemic and planned urbanisation through enhancing the entire ecosystem of legal, regulatory, and institutional reforms along with capacity building of ULBs and community awareness," the ADB statement said.
"Specifically, ULBs will promote modernisation of building bylaws, land pooling, an urban agglomeration, and comprehensive urban mobility planning through transit-oriented development to help cities become well-planned centres of economic growth," it added. ADB expects cities to become credit-worthy through various revenue-enhancing reforms, such as property taxes and user charges, which will improve efficiencies and rationalise expenditures.
These measures will substantially help cities mobilise innovative financings such as commercial borrowings, issuance of municipal bonds, sub-sovereign debts, and public–private partnerships to bridge the significant deficit in urban infrastructure investments. "ADB will continue to provide knowledge and advisory support to the Ministry of Housing and Urban Affairs in program implementation, including monitoring and evaluation," the ADB said.
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