KWA lost over 300 cr in last fiscal
Thiruvananthapuram: Kerala Water Authority (KWA) incurred a loss of Rs 4.66 for every 1,000 litres of drinking water supplied in 2024-25, according to water resources department data.The cost of production and distribution of 1,000 litres stood at Rs 24.56, while the revenue realised was Rs 19.90. The gap translated into an annual loss of Rs 317.63 crore for the financial year. The cumulative loss now reached Rs 7,156.76 crore. KWA operated in a revenue deficit since its inception, with non-plan grants from state govt partially offsetting the shortfall.
Govt-approved water tariffs remain KWA's principal source of income. Expenditure, however, steadily increased, including salary and pension commitments, electricity charges, maintenance costs and loan repayments with interest. Tariff revisions haven't kept pace with rise in operating costs.Under Water Supply Regulation Act, 1986, water charges are to be fixed on a no-profit, no-loss basis. Also, Section 15(iii) of the Act bars KWA from revising tariffs without prior govt approval.Political sensitivity surrounding tariff revision has surfaced in the assembly earlier. On Feb 7, 2023, opposition raised the issue in the House. Defending the hike at the time, water resources minister Roshy Augustine said KWA's consolidated loss was Rs 4,911.42 crore. He cited mounting dues to Kerala State Electricity Board Ltd, which he said was Rs 1,263 crore, and rising chemical costs.Opposition countered that successive increases in water tariff, alongside hikes in power and fuel prices, burdened households. Opposition leader V D Satheesan argued that while the minister described the hike as 1 paise per litre, the monthly impact on households was significantly higher. He alleged high levels of non-revenue water and inefficiencies within KWA, contending that distribution losses were being passed on to consumers. The 2024-25 figures now placed in the assembly show that the gap between cost and recovery continues and has increased.As of Dec 2025, unpaid dues from institutional consumers add further strain. Public sector undertakings owe Rs 18.44 crore, while govt institutions account for Rs 123.24 crore. However, there are no large private institutions with arrears exceeding Rs 25 lakh. Together, public and govt sector entities account for Rs 141.68 crore in pending dues.Augustine told the assembly that KWA initiated multiple steps to recover arrears from defaulters, though these seemed to be half-hearted measures. He said in 2022, water resources department wrote to all department secretaries directing clearance of pending water charges. Since then, KWA managing director has issued annual reminders to heads of departments.In 2023, the managing director wrote to finance secretary seeking deduction of arrears at source from local self-govt institutions and govt establishments, and transfer the amounts to KWA.According to Augustine, officers from KWA headquarters visited defaulting institutions, and section-level squads were deployed to intensify recovery. Departments willing to settle dues are covered under ‘one-time settlement scheme', while revenue adalats were organised to resolve pending amounts with permissible concessions. For other consumers, measures include issuing disconnection notices, cutting water supply in cases of non-payment, allowing instalments of up to 10 payments for large pending bills, initiating revenue recovery proceedings and sending SMS reminders urging payment.
Govt-approved water tariffs remain KWA's principal source of income. Expenditure, however, steadily increased, including salary and pension commitments, electricity charges, maintenance costs and loan repayments with interest. Tariff revisions haven't kept pace with rise in operating costs.Under Water Supply Regulation Act, 1986, water charges are to be fixed on a no-profit, no-loss basis. Also, Section 15(iii) of the Act bars KWA from revising tariffs without prior govt approval.Political sensitivity surrounding tariff revision has surfaced in the assembly earlier. On Feb 7, 2023, opposition raised the issue in the House. Defending the hike at the time, water resources minister Roshy Augustine said KWA's consolidated loss was Rs 4,911.42 crore. He cited mounting dues to Kerala State Electricity Board Ltd, which he said was Rs 1,263 crore, and rising chemical costs.Opposition countered that successive increases in water tariff, alongside hikes in power and fuel prices, burdened households. Opposition leader V D Satheesan argued that while the minister described the hike as 1 paise per litre, the monthly impact on households was significantly higher. He alleged high levels of non-revenue water and inefficiencies within KWA, contending that distribution losses were being passed on to consumers. The 2024-25 figures now placed in the assembly show that the gap between cost and recovery continues and has increased.As of Dec 2025, unpaid dues from institutional consumers add further strain. Public sector undertakings owe Rs 18.44 crore, while govt institutions account for Rs 123.24 crore. However, there are no large private institutions with arrears exceeding Rs 25 lakh. Together, public and govt sector entities account for Rs 141.68 crore in pending dues.Augustine told the assembly that KWA initiated multiple steps to recover arrears from defaulters, though these seemed to be half-hearted measures. He said in 2022, water resources department wrote to all department secretaries directing clearance of pending water charges. Since then, KWA managing director has issued annual reminders to heads of departments.In 2023, the managing director wrote to finance secretary seeking deduction of arrears at source from local self-govt institutions and govt establishments, and transfer the amounts to KWA.According to Augustine, officers from KWA headquarters visited defaulting institutions, and section-level squads were deployed to intensify recovery. Departments willing to settle dues are covered under ‘one-time settlement scheme', while revenue adalats were organised to resolve pending amounts with permissible concessions. For other consumers, measures include issuing disconnection notices, cutting water supply in cases of non-payment, allowing instalments of up to 10 payments for large pending bills, initiating revenue recovery proceedings and sending SMS reminders urging payment.
Popular from City
- Earthquake jolts Kolkata, panic among residents
- Watch: Strong earthquake rattles Kolkata, residents flee homes, offices in panic
- 5 months, 17 months, and finally freedom: Arvind Kejriwal, Manish Sisodia cleared in Delhi excise case
- Delhi excise policy case: Ex-Delhi CM Arvind Kejriwal, former dy CM Manish Sisodia acquitted
- Haryana govt official jumps to death from 6th floor of civil secretariat in Chandigarh; workplace stress angle probed
end of article
Trending Stories
- T20 World Cup Live: Lifeline for Pakistan as England beat NZ to top Super 8 group
- England national cricket team vs New Zealand national cricket team match Live Scorecard: NZ win toss, opt to bat in Colombo
- India GDP Q3 Growth Data 2026 Live Updates: First GDP data under new series to be released today
- Earthquake jolts Kolkata, panic among residents
- CBSE Class 10 Science Paper 2026 PDF Now Available: Download and Analyze
- Why is stock market down today? Nifty50 falls 317 points, BSE Sensex crashes 961 points to close at 81,287- top reasons
08:03 Kejriwal, Sisodia Discharged: Delhi court finds no evidence of conspiracy; CBI plans to appeal
Featured in city
- Delhi launches Rs 160-crore underground cabling project in Chandni Chowk
- Watch: Strong earthquake rattles Kolkata, residents flee homes, offices in panic
- Bengaluru–Hyderabad rail journey set to get faster from next month
- FIR against 6 directors of 2 realty firms for s 5cr fraud in Gurgaon
- Delhi’s 61-km road along with Najafgarh drain corridor to ease traffic and boost connectivity
- A ‘helping’ hand in fake ED raid at retired employer's house and how plot unravelled
Photostories
- Ditch the pastel winds: What Vijay Deverakonda's and Rashmika Mandanna's wedding outfits taught us
- 6 Indian billionaires who own private residence worth crores in Lutyens’ Bungalow Zone, Delhi
- From red anarkali to yellow suit: Rashmika Mandanna’s newlywed glow steals the spotlight
- 10 Bihari Sattu dishes that are good for gut health and overall nutrition
- One woman dies every 8 minutes in India from cervical cancer: Oncologist shares 5 critical steps to prevent it
- Deepika Padukone to Aishwarya Rai: Bollywood stars who turned down Hollywood projects
- From Bengal’s Mukut to Marathi Mundavalya:5 stunning bridal headgears from different states
- 8 healthy daily habits to keep your heart strong and prevent heart disease, says cardiologist
- Top 7 muscle car names that defined an era
- Regional Holi foods from different parts of India that no one talks about
Videos
03:50 Experts Answer Who Is Really Running Pakistan’s Afghan Policy?03:33 Amid Rising Violence, Afghanistan Urges Pakistan For Talks To Prevent Prolonged Conflict03:38 “Deep Concern”: China Alarms As Pakistan-Afghanistan Clash Explodes After Taliban Strike30:56 Kejriwal Gets Clean Chit In Delhi Liquor Policy Case, Court Tears Into CBI Over Lack Of Evidence04:58 Pakistan Army Blames India Again For 'Open War' Against Afghanistan, Calls Taliban Delhi’s Proxy04:41 Canada PM Mark Carney Lands In India, Aims For Fresh Push To Reset Strained Bilateral Ties04:53 Pakistan in Open War With Afghanistan, But Does Islamabad Have the Military Muscle?03:13 "If BJP Wins Over 10 Seats...": Kejriwal Throws Open Challenge After Court Relief04:12 Why Netanyahu’s Reference to Indian Soldiers In Battle Of Haifa Sparks Criticism in Turkey
Up Next
Start a Conversation
Post comment