While climate is changing, unpredictable monsoons and the depletion of groundwater in cities and villages are threat for life. Sujalam Sufalam Bharat is proving to be one of India’s most effective grassroots water initiatives. Ministry of Jal Shakti initiated the Sujalam Sufalam Bharat campaign, it wasn’t just a urge for cleaner water, it was a revolution in the way India believes in cherishing every drop.
The project that is smaller form of the larger Jal Jeevan Mission and Swachh Bharat Mission (Grameen) Phase II, is seeking to make India water secure by ensuring community engagement, technology-based management and environmental rejuvenation. The campaign focuses on three aspects for water sustainability conservation, reuse and recharge for long-term supply and quality of water resources.
Foundation of a Water-Secure Nation
In 2021, the Jal Shakti Ministry launched Sujalam Sufalam project, a 100-Day Campaign to establish greywater management infrastructure throughout rural India. This was a one-time effort, which gradually evolved into a national movement. In a matter of months, lakhs of soak pits, recharge wells and treatment ponds were created. Government reports state that more than 10 lakh greywater management assets were installed throughout 2.5 lakh villages in the first phase alone.
The beauty of this model is that it is simple where kitchen and bath wastewater is treated on-site and recycled for irrigation or groundwater replenishment. Not only does this save freshwater, but it also ensures cleanliness and hygiene in rural homes.
Community Change through Jan Bhagidari
Whereas heavy infrastructure projects rely on centralised implementation, Sujalam Sufalam Bharat is built around Jan Bhagidari or citizen participation. Gram Panchayats are at the centre of local water project planning and execution. From mapping heritage ponds to reviving abandoned water bodies, every stage of implementation sees direct participation of villagers.
Government records indicate that more than 2.3 crore individuals have been mobilized in Sujalam Sufalam water conservation campaigns. Self-help groups of women and eco-clubs of schools have also been identified as major contributors, educating masses about water-saving strategies. In a large number of villages, children now practising campaigns for “greywater reuse” as part of their civic duty.
Drawing Campaign on India’s Traditional Wisdom
The Sujalam Sufalam campaign takes India back to its ancient water sense. Traditionally Indian societies created advanced systems stepwells, tanks and ponds to collect monsoon water. The initiative brings back these techniques with a science twist.
More than 67,000 ponds in districts have been rejuvenated under Amrit Sarovar Abhiyan, which was introduced in 2022 and are being used as water storage as well as community heritage destinations. With Sujalam, these initiatives are making rural landscapes a living example of water resilience.
Panchayats in Madhya Pradesh’s Sehore district have restored ancient talabs that now act as recharge sites for wells. In Rajasthan, treated wastewater from Sujalam Sufalamsoak pits is used to irrigate fields by taking pressure off limited groundwater. Such community initiatives join sustainability with livelihood security.
Technological Support to Sujalam Sufalam Intiative
Whereas Sujalam Sufalam Bharat is rooted in tradition, it’s also based firmly on science and data. The National Water Informatics Centre of the Ministry of Jal Shakti offers a digital framework is documenting all bodies of water through GIS platforms. Real-time data is used to enable districts to monitor the efficiency of recharge structures and rainfall trends.
Parallel efforts like Store the Rain campaign, initiated under the National Water Mission, supplement Sujalam Sufalam by encouraging rainwater harvesting on all rooftops and open spaces. They represent together the government’s vision of “Per Drop More Crop” and “Every Drop Counted”.
One of Sujalam’s most revolutionary features is converting waste into a resource. The campaign promotes reuse of treated greywater for agriculture and horticulture. Low-cost filtration units have been innovated at low costs by local innovators in most states using sand, gravel and charcoal.
In Villupuram district in Tamil Nadu, anganwadi’s and schools now recycle wastewater from handwashing stations and use it for gardening. The impact is tangible with better environments, more greenery and healthful children. With the Jal Shakti Ministry, almost 70% of greywater produced in model villages is now reused which is a huge progress in rural sanitation process.
Sujalam Sufalam Bharat is closely integrated with Swachh Bharat Mission (Grameen) Phase II, aiming for Open Defecation Free (ODF) villages that sustain sanitation by solid and liquid waste management. By connecting water management with sanitation, the campaign has a message that sanitation is not merely toilets but complete environmental cleanliness.
The ODF Plus dashboard indicates that there are over 3.8 lakh villages attained ODF Plus status and Sujalam Sufalam interventions have played a crucial role in maintaining these gains by addressing liquid waste in a proper manner.
Sujalam Sufalam Bharat’s larger vision goes beyond clean water and it is about making rural India self-sustaining and eco-friendly. Each recharge pit, every rejuvenated pond and every drop recycled contributes to India development narrative.
Prime Minister Narendra Modi has himself often characterized water as the bedrock of Viksit Bharat. Campaigns such as Sujalam Sufalam are making that dream a reality, measurable and tangible. Rural villagers are no longer only recipients of government schemes, they are becoming active custodians of natural resources.
While India readies itself for Amrit Kaal, Sujalam Sufalam Bharat is an example of cooperative federalism and collective responsibility. It demonstrates that the journey to a developed India starts not with new industry or infrastructure but with judicious management of its most essential water resource.














