Jammu and Kashmir stands at a crossroads. A land blessed with rivers that roar through its valleys and mountains that cradle immense natural wealth continues to live with fragile infrastructure and unreliable systems. The paradox is striking: a province with one of India’s richest hydropower potentials still struggles with power cuts, irrigation failures and the daily anxieties of communities who cannot depend on the basics. This is not a story of scarcity but of squandered opportunity.
Hydropower has long been hailed as the union territory’s natural advantage. Experts estimate more than 12,000 MW of capacity could be harnessed, yet only a fraction has been realized. The result is a paradoxical dependence on costly imports of electricity during peak winter months, when demand is highest and local generation falters. Transmission and distribution losses hover around 48 percent; among the worst in the country—meaning nearly half of the electricity generated or purchased never reaches consumers. For households, this translates into dark evenings; for farmers, unreliable pumps; for industries, stalled production lines. The promise of hydropower remains largely on paper.
Irrigation remains a fragile lifeline. Silted canals, failing pumps, and neglected maintenance expose farmers to constant risk. Climate change has worsened the strain, with drier winters, erratic rainfall and shifting snowmelt disrupting cycles that once sustained both agriculture and hydropower. The outcome is a damaging loop: power shortages weaken irrigation, poor irrigation cuts farm yields and rural incomes collapse under mounting uncertainty.
On the ground, the picture is stark. Ageing transmission lines and overloaded transformers drive outages. Poor metering and lax billing starve utilities of funds needed for upgrades. Farmers lose crops when irrigation fails, households live under the shadow of power cuts, and communities resort to costly, unsustainable alternatives like diesel generators and private borewells. The psychological toll of living with uncertainty; whether electricity will last through the evening or water will reach the fields is as significant as the material losses.
Urgent action is essential. Infrastructure in Jammu and Kashmir is not a luxury but a lifeline. Cutting losses through smart metering, feeder segregation, and strict revenue discipline must be prioritized. Hydropower projects already cleared should move swiftly, backed by transparent contracts and independent audits. At the same time, energy diversification is critical; rooftop solar, micro-hydro, and storage can ease winter shortages and reduce costly imports. Irrigation systems, too, demand modernization, with telemetry, watershed management and regular upkeep to shield farmers from the growing shocks of climate change.
Governance is the thread that ties these efforts together. Delays caused by interference or opaque processes undermine credibility and inflate costs. Transparency, accountability and community participation must become the norm.
The stakes could not be higher. Reliable power and irrigation in Jammu and Kashmir are not luxuries; they are the backbone of resilience in a region where livelihoods are fragile and climate risks are intensifying. Strengthening infrastructure means strengthening the economy and society. It means ensuring that farmers can irrigate their fields without fear of pump failures, that students can study without power cuts, and that industries can grow without being crippled by shortages.
Jammu and Kashmir has the resources, the potential and the urgency. What it needs now is the resolve to act decisively, to build systems that are efficient, climate-ready, and people-cantered. The rivers and ridges of the place hold the promise of prosperity. It is time to turn that promise into reality.
