Narmada Malwa Ghambhir Project
Narmada Malwa Ghambhir Project
Agriculture plays a crucial role in the Indian economy, with India heavily relying on monsoon rains for its agricultural practices. The main objective of the Narmada-Malwa-Ghambhir Link Project is to provide irrigation facilities in water-scarce in the upper reaches of the Chambal basin, where only 5.54% of the cultivable area is irrigated. The Narmada-Malwa-Ghambhir Interconnection Project will supply around 50,000 hectares of CCA in the districts of Indore and Ujjain in the Malwa region with water for irrigation, drinking and industrial purposes. More than 150 villages benefit from this. Wilo India is proud to be a part of projects in which our technology contributes to a sustainable future.
In drought-prone Malwa, water was once a distant dream, with dry wells, failing crops, and uncertain futures. Meanwhile, the Narmada flowed steadily, rich with untapped potential. The Narmada–Malwa–Gambhir River Link Project bridged this gap—connecting surplus to scarcity through a lifeline of canals. Slowly, water reached parched lands, reviving the seasonal Gambhir river and transforming barren fields into fertile green. Farmers returned with renewed confidence, and villages regained life. More than infrastructure, it became a symbol of possibility—where thoughtful planning, human effort, and nature came together to rewrite destinies, proving that when rivers unite, hope flows endlessly.