According to the Ministry of Transport, there are over 1,000 kilometres of navigable inland waterways in India. If developed, these could reduce stress on the country’s highways, and could also provide an alternative and efficient mode of transport for goods and people. To realize the potential of inland waterways in India, the Inland Waterways Authority of India (IWAI), a statutory government body responsible for development of inland waterways, embarked on a first-of-a-kind pilot project in the east for the development of inland ports in India. This project will also assist in increasing trade between India and Nepal, as the project proposes to amend the India- Nepal Protocol to the Treaty of Transit, 1999, to specifically include inland waterways on the list of mutually agreed routes for transporting goods between India and Nepal.
According to the Ministry of Transport, there are over 1,000 kilometres of navigable inland waterways in India. If developed, these could reduce stress on the country’s highways, and could also provide an alternative and efficient mode of transport for goods and people. To realize the potential of inland waterways in India, the Inland Waterways Authority of India (IWAI), a statutory government body responsible for development of inland waterways, embarked on a first-of-a-kind pilot project in the east for the development of inland ports in India. This project will also assist in increasing trade between India and Nepal, as the project proposes to amend the India- Nepal Protocol to the Treaty of Transit, 1999, to specifically include inland waterways on the list of mutually agreed routes for transporting goods between India and Nepal.