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BMC halts water supply to swimming pools and construction sites - Mid-day
BMC halts water supply to swimming pools and construction sites - Mid-day
Updated On:17 June, 2026 08:20 AM IST|Mumbai|Eeshanpriya MS
With water reserves in Mumbai’s seven lakes falling to 10.35 per cent, the BMC has stopped water supply to swimming pools and construction sites and imposed a 20 per cent cut on industrial and commercial users to conserve drinking water amid delayed monsoon rains
The Kamgar swimming pool in Dadar West. The BMC will stop supplying water to such facilities from today. FILE PIC/SHADAB KHAN
TheBrihanmumbai Municipal Corporation (BMC) has decided to stop supplying water to swimming poolsand construction sites in the city from Wednesday. It will also implement a 20 per cent water cut for all industrial and commercial establishments in addition to the 10 per cent precautionary water cut that has been in place across Mumbai since May 15.
The civic body has urged citizens to use water judiciously. Representation Pic
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Water Crisis Deepens Across Mumbai As Tanker Strike Hits South Mumbai ...
Water Crisis Deepens Across Mumbai As Tanker Strike Hits South Mumbai ...
Mumbai’s worsening water crisis intensified on Monday after the Mumbai Water Tanker Association (MWTA) launched an indefinite strike, disrupting water supply across South Mumbai, the western suburbs and central parts of the city. The strike comes at a time when the Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation (BMC) has already imposed a 10 per cent water cut due to low lake levels, leaving thousands of residents and businesses struggling for water.
With nearly 2,100 water tankers off the roads, housing societies, commercial establishments, hotels, restaurants and construction sites that depend on tanker water have been severely affected. Several residential complexes reportedly imposed water restrictions of up to nine hours, while some offices sent employees home early due to inadequate water availability.
Breaking It Down
What actions is BMC taking against illegal water extraction?
How are current weather patterns affecting Mumbai's water supply?
What is the status of water levels in Mumbai's reservoirs?
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The impact was also felt on Mumbai’s transport network. Western Railway repor…
Less than 7% water stock left in Mumbai reservoirs - Rediff.com
Less than 7% water stock left in Mumbai reservoirs - Rediff.com
The BMC is closely monitoring reservoir levels and enforcing water conservation measures as concerns over supply grow.
Mumbai is staring at a severe water crisis as the combined live storage in its seven supply reservoirs has dropped to less than 7 per cent, significantly lower than last year, due to delayed monsoon and insufficient rainfall so far this year.
In the corresponding period last year, the water stock in these seven dams was 39.5 per cent.
As per the data from the Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation's Hydraulic Engineer's Department, the seven reservoirs together held 1,00,279 million litres of water, or 6.93 per cent of their total live storage capacity, at 6 am (on Monday), compared with 5,71,670 million litres (39.5 per cent) on the corresponding day last year.
Seven reservoirs -- Bhatsa, Upper Vaitarna, Modak Sagar, Tansa, Middle Vaitarna, Tulsi, and Vihar -- make up the entire seven-lake system that supplies drinking water to the financial capital of the country and its metropolitan areas. They have a combined useful storage capacity of 14.47 lakh million litres and supply around 4,000 million litr…
Less than 7 pc stock left in reservoirs supplying water to Mumbai
Less than 7 pc stock left in reservoirs supplying water to Mumbai
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Mumbai is facing the prospect of a severe water shortage, with the combined live storage in the seven reservoirs supplying drinking water to the city dropping to less than seven per cent of capacity, the lowest level for this time of year in comparison with 2025, amid a delayed monsoon and inadequate rainfall.
According to data released by the Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation's (BMC) Hydraulic Engineer's Department, the seven reservoirs together held 1,00,279 million litres of water, or 6.93 per cent of their total live storage capacity, at 6 am on Monday. On the corresponding day last year, the reservoirs contained 5,71,670 million litres, or 39.5 per cent of capacity.
The seven-lake system, Bhatsa, Upper Vaitarna, Modak Sagar, Tansa, Middle Vaitarna, Tulsi and Vihar — has a combined useful storage capacity of 14.47 lakh million litres and supplies around 4,000 million litres of drinking water daily to Mumbai and its metropolitan region.
Among the major reservoirs, Upper Vaitarna, Modak Sagar,…
Mumbai Water Crisis: With 10% Reservoirs, Pools And Construction Water ...
Mumbai Water Crisis: With 10% Reservoirs, Pools And Construction Water ...
Facing an acute water scarcity, the Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation (BMC) announced a complete suspension of water supply to all swimming pools and construction sites across Mumbai, effective June 17, 2026. This drastic measure comes as the combined water levels in the seven reservoirs feeding the metropolis have plummeted to a critical 10.35 per cent due to a delayed monsoon linked to El Niño.While residents navigate a continuing 10 per cent domestic cut, the latest circular imposes an immediate 20 per cent reduction on industrial and commercial establishments. Real estate developers are bracing for project delays and rising costs, prompting industry leaders to call for urgent investments in water recycling. Meanwhile, major public bodies like the railways and the Indian Navy have been ordered to pivot to treated sewage water to conserve the city’s remaining potable reserves.
Topreventa total dry-out, the BMC’s Hydraulic Engineer’s Department issued a comprehensive circular detailing stringent conservation rules that heavily restrict non-essential, commercial, and heavy-industrial potable water usage. …
Less Than 7 Per Cent Water Stock Left in Reservoirs Supplying Water to ...
Less Than 7 Per Cent Water Stock Left in Reservoirs Supplying Water to ...
Mumbai is staring at a severe water crisis as the combined live storage in its seven supply reservoirs has dropped to less than 7 per cent, significantly lower than last year, due to delayed monsoon and insufficient rainfall so far this year
In the corresponding period last year, the water stock in these seven dams was 39.5 per cent.
As per the data from the Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation's Hydraulic Engineer's Department, the seven reservoirs together held 1,00,279 million litres of water, or 6.93 per cent of their total live storage capacity, at 6 am (on Monday), compared with 5,71,670 million litres (39.5 per cent) on the corresponding day last year.
Seven reservoirs -- Bhatsa, Upper Vaitarna, Modak Sagar, Tansa, Middle Vaitarna, Tulsi, and Vihar -- make up the entire seven-lake system that supplies drinking water to the financial capital of the country and its metropolitan areas. They have a combined useful storage capacity of 14.47 lakh million litres and supply around 4,000 million litres of potable water daily to Mumbai.
Four major reservoirs -- Upper Vaitarna, Modak Sagar, Tansa and Middle V…
Why Mumbai's water supply is under pressure this monsoon season
Why Mumbai's water supply is under pressure this monsoon season
Mumbai has tightened water conservation measures as reservoir levels supplying the city continue to decline amid a delayed southwest monsoon. The Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation (BMC) has announced fresh restrictions on water use, saying the move is necessary to preserve drinking water supplies.
The civic body has imposed a 20% cut in water supply to industrial, commercial and sports establishments after water stock in the reservoirs supplying Mumbai dropped to 10.35% of total capacity. The restrictions came into effect on Wednesday.
Also read:BMC to cut water connections to swimming pools, construction sites
Mumbai's water crisis is primarily the result of a delayed monsoon and dwindling reserves in the seven lakes that supply drinking water to the city.
The city depends almost entirely on these reservoirs, which are replenished during the monsoon months. However, with rains arriving later than expected and inflows remaining below normal, water levels have fallen sharply ahead of the peak monsoon period.
As of Tuesday, the reservoirs collectively held 149,750 million litres (ML) of water — just 10.35% of thei…
Mumbai water crisis: BMC halts supply to swimming pools, construction ...
Mumbai water crisis: BMC halts supply to swimming pools, construction ...
Mumbai is staring at a worsening water crisis as delayed monsoon rains and shrinking reservoir levels have forced the Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation (BMC) to impose stricter water conservation measures across the city. With water stocks in the reservoirs supplying Mumbai falling to just 10.35 per cent of their total capacity, the civic body has announced a fresh set of restrictions aimed at preserving drinking water supplies until rainfall improves the situation. The new guidelines will come into effect from June 17 and include restrictions on non-essential water usage across residential, commercial and industrial sectors.
The civic body has already been implementing a 10 per cent water cut in Mumbai since May 15. However, the continued delay in monsoon rainfall, reportedly linked to the impact of El Niño conditions, has prompted authorities to take additional precautionary steps.
Under the latest directives, all water connections provided to ongoing construction projects will be temporarily disconnected. Approval for new water connections for construction activities has also been suspended until furth…
Water crisis deepens in Mumbai: BMC halts supply to pools, construction sites
Water crisis deepens in Mumbai: BMC halts supply to pools, construction sites
Mumbai faces severe water scarcity as lake levels drop to 10.35%, prompting the BMC to impose a 20% cut on industrial and commercial supply, suspend water to construction sites and swimming pools, and limit bottling plants. These measures, effective June 17, add to existing citywide restrictions amid a delayed monsoon.
Mumbai Rations Water Use Further As Delayed Monsoon Leaves ... - OneIndia
Mumbai Rations Water Use Further As Delayed Monsoon Leaves ... - OneIndia
Mumbai Imposes Strict Water Cuts As Reservoir Levels Plummet To 10 Percent
Mumbai
-Oneindia Staff
By
Oneindia Staff
Updated: Wednesday, June 17, 2026, 9:55 [IST]
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Mumbai has moved into a tighter water-conservation mode after the usable stock in the seven lakes that supply the city fell to nearly 10% amid a delayed monsoon. The Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation has stopped fresh water connections for new construction sites and restricted supply to swimming pools, industrial users, commercial establishments and sports clubs until further notice.
The additional curbs, announced on June 16 and effective from June 17, are aimed at preserving drinking water for households and essential services. Mumbai has already been under a 10% water cut since May 15. The civic body said strict action will be taken against misuse of water or violation of the new restrictions.
AI Summary
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Effective June 17, Mumbai's BMC mandated stricter water conservation, halting new construction water connections and limiting supply for pools, industries, and clubs,…
India's Mumbai rations water supply as June rainfall hits 12-year low
India's Mumbai rations water supply as June rainfall hits 12-year low
PTI
Mumbai faces its driest June in over a decade. Water supply to construction sites is cut. Industrial usage is reduced by 20%
Mumbai: Grappling with its driest June in more than a decade, India's financial capital of Mumbai has cut water supply to construction sites and reduced industrial usage by 20% starting from Wednesday, as reservoir levels decline.
Mumbai, on the western coast of the country, is dependent on seven lakes outside the city for its water supply, and they are now at 10.35% of their total capacity, authorities said. That leaves the city of 13 million with just 40 days' worth of water.
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As of Wednesday, authorities said water supply to all construction sites will be temporarily disconnected and new water connections for such sites will be put on hold.
Water supply to industrial, commercial establishments and sports clubs will also be cut by 20%, a statement from the city's civic body said late on Tuesday. A 10% water cut was already imposed by authorities in mid-May.
Live Even…
Corroboration
No verdict, no pronouncement. The model extracts atomic factual claims with verbatim quotes; every quote is validated against the source text and corroboration is computed by counting how many editorially-opposed blocs assert each fact. 3 fabricated/unverifiable quotes were rejected by the cite-or-die gate.
The spine · 2 facts corroborated across ≥2 opposed blocs
2×broadly confirmedWater reserves in Mumbai’s seven lakes have fallen to 10.35 per cent.
indiaother
timesofindia“lake levels drop to 10.35%”
mid-day.com“water reserves in Mumbai’s seven lakes falling to 10.35 per cent”
2×broadly confirmedThe BMC has imposed a 20 per cent cut on industrial and commercial water supply.
indiaother
timesofindia“impose a 20% cut on industrial and commercial supply”
mid-day.com“imposed a 20 per cent cut on industrial and commercial users”
Single-source · 6 — reported by one bloc only (uncorroborated)
The BMC has halted water supply to swimming pools.
timesofindia
The BMC has halted water supply to construction sites.
timesofindia
A 10 per cent precautionary water cut has been in place across Mumbai since May 15.
mid-day.com
The BMC has urged citizens to use water judiciously.
mid-day.com
The measures announced by the BMC are effective from June 17.
timesofindia
The BMC has limited bottling plants.
timesofindia
Framing · 3 — loaded language surfaced (spin shown, not adopted)
timesofindia
“Water crisis deepens in Mumbai”
→ Mumbai is experiencing water scarcity
timesofindia
“amid a delayed monsoon”
→ The monsoon has been delayed
mid-day.com
“to conserve drinking water amid delayed monsoon rains”
→ The measures aim to conserve drinking water due to delayed monsoon rains
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