Clean Rivers, Healthy Villages
Ministry of Jal Shakti, Government of India
The Ganga carries the hopes of 400 million people — and their sewage. Namami Gange is India's largest river cleanup: 1,840 million litres of treatment capacity built, village by village. In Varanasi, stretches that were ecological dead zones now support dolphins again. The river isn't clean yet. But it's coming back.

Impact Metrics
Toilets Built
Treatment Capacity
Gram Panchayats Impacted
Sustainable Development Goals
Good Health
Clean Water
Sustainable Cities
Life Below Water
About This Project
Organisation: Ministry of Jal Shakti, Government of India
Location: Ganga Basin, India
Visit Project Website →Verification Standard
Endorsed and monitored by national or international government agencies.
Standard: Government-Anchored + World Bank
インパクト概要
単位を切り替えて、プロジェクトの資金調達目標、年間吸収量、回復面積を表示します。
資金調達中: このプロジェクトはまだこの指標を公開していません。検証者レポートは四半期ごとに更新されます。
最近のサポーター
最初の投票者になりましょう。
ディスカッション
コメントを読み込み中…
How Funding Works
Funding Route: Partnership Agreement
This project operates through a formalized partnership with government or multilateral organisations, ensuring sustainable impact.
Vote for This Project
Direct your impact votes to support this project's expansion and amplify its environmental and social benefits.
Vote Now →Related Projects in India
View all in India →
Clean Cookstove & Air Quality
Indoor air pollution kills 1.6 million Indians a year. EKI's improved cookstoves cut smoke by 80% and save families ₹450 a month.

Fisher Futures
Vaan Island was disappearing. UNDP deployed 6,000 artificial reef modules — underwater cities for fish to colonise. In seven years, the island gained back more.

Green Champions
In 519 districts, school children run their own environmental missions. A Green Corps eco-club in rural Rajasthan built a rainwater harvesting system.
Your vote keeps this watershed clean.