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DELHI WATER CRISIS DUE TO AMMONIA SPIKE
from Vajirao & Reddy Institute
Current Affairs
DELHI WATER CRISIS DUE TO AMMONIA SPIKE
By : Author Desk
Updated : 2026-01-27 11:56:34
DELHI WATER CRISIS DUE TO AMMONIA SPIKE
Why in News?
In
January 2026
, Delhi plunged into a massive drinking water crisis as
six of its nine major Water Treatment Plants (WTPs) were forced to shut down
or operate at minimal capacity.
The crisis, which disrupted supply to nearly
50% of the city
, was caused by a "double blow": record-breaking
ammonia levels
in the Yamuna River and the unscheduled closure of the
Munak Canal
for repairs.
IMMEDIATE CAUSES
The Ammonia Spike:
Ammonia concentrations in the Yamuna surged to
3 ppm
, far exceeding the maximum treatable limit of
1 ppm
for Delhi’s aging infrastructure.
This forced the immediate shutdown of the
Wazirabad
and
Chandrawal
Munak Canal Closure:
A critical raw water lifeline from Haryana, the Munak Canal, was closed for unscheduled maintenance on
January 19, 2026
.
The Impact:
Raw water supply was slashed by
50%
Duration:
Disruptions are expected to persist until
February 4, 2026
.
Dilution Failure:
Normally, ammonia is diluted by diverting fresh water from the Munak Canal into the Wazirabad pond.
Since the canal itself was shut, no dilution was possible, leading to a total system collapse.
SCALE OF IMPACT SUPPLY SHORTFALL
Volume:
Against a normal daily demand of
1000 MGD
(Million Gallons per Day), the city faced a shortfall of nearly
400-500 MGD
.
Geographic Spread:
Severe shortages hit North, West, Central, and South-West Delhi.
Lutyens' Delhi:
Even the New Delhi Municipal Council (NDMC) areas and VVIP zones experienced
45-50%
supply cuts.
ABOUT NH
3
Chemical Nature:
A colorless, pungent gas composed of nitrogen and hydrogen (
NH
3
).
It is highly soluble in water, forming aqueous ammonia.
Industrial Production:
Manufactured via the
Haber-Bosch process
under high pressure and temperature.
Applications:
Agriculture:
Approximately
90%
of global ammonia is used in fertilizers (e.g., Ammonium Nitrate).
Industry:
Used as a refrigerant, in plastics, explosives, dyes, and pharmaceuticals.
Environmental Hazard:
It is highly toxic to aquatic life.
In drinking water, it reacts with chlorine to form chloramines, reducing
disinfection efficiency
and altering the taste/smell of water.
CHRONIC POLLUTION & GOVERNANCE DEFICIT
Seasonal Pattern:
Ammonia spikes are a recurring winter phenomenon (
15-22 times annually
) due to
reduced river flow
and the concentration of industrial effluents from Haryana's Panipat and Sonipat regions.
Infrastructure Lag:
Despite an announcement in the
Delhi Budget 2022-23
, a specialized
Ammonia Treatment Plant
at Wazirabad has not yet been commissioned, leaving the city vulnerable to predictable pollution events.
DELHI’S WATER DEPENDANCE MATRIX
Source
Contribution
Status during Jan 2026 Crisis
Yamuna & Related Canals
40.8%
Crippled
due to high ammonia.
Ganga (via UP)
26.5%
Operational
; only source providing stable supply.
Bhakra Storage (via Haryana)
23.1%
Reduced
due to Munak Canal repairs.
Groundwater/Recycled
9.6%
Insufficient to meet the massive deficit.
GOVERNMENT & ADMINISTRATIVE RESPONSE
Delhi Jal Board (DJB):
Rationalized the remaining supply from Ganga-fed plants and deployed water tankers to parched colonies.
Inter-State Coordination:
The Delhi Government petitioned the Haryana Government to increase the release of water from the
Hathini Kund Barrage
to flush out the ammonia-laden water in the Yamuna.
Judicial Oversight:
The crisis has once again brought the
Upper Yamuna River Board (UYRB)
under the scanner for failing to ensure pollution-free raw water transit between states.
CONCLUSION
The 2026 water crisis highlights that Delhi’s water security is precariously balanced between trans-boundary river health and local infrastructure readiness. While the Ganga-fed plants provided a slim safety net, the delayed commissioning of the Wazirabad ammonia treatment facility remains a significant governance bottleneck in achieving a "Water-Plus" Delhi.
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