India at present has only five river stretches declared a as National Waterways.
"The Union Cabinet chaired by the Prime Minister Narendra Modi, today gave its approval for enactment of Central legislation for declaring 101 additional Inland Waterways as National Waterways (NW) for navigation," an official statement said.
This will create a logistic supply chain with intermodal (Rail, Road and Waterways) connectivity and "would positively contribute to the GDP by opening up business opportunities in the area of dredging, barge construction, barge operation, barge repair facilities, terminal construction...Tourist cruise" among others, the statement said.
Detailed business development studies are being carried out under the Jal Marg Vikas Project for identifying all business opportunities and quantifying anticipated investments and employment opportunities, it added.
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The government said Inland Water Transport (IWT) which is recognised globally as a cost-efficient way of transportation will result in huge cost savings in comparison to rail and road transport besides being environment-friendly.
It said in view of the large network of inland waterways in India, there is vast potential in IWT to act as an alternate and supplementary mode of transportation.
Five of the river-stretches, which have been declared as National Waterways, include Allahabad-Haldia on Ganga (1,620 km), Brahmaputra's Dhubri-Sadiya (891 km), West Coast Canal Kottapuram-Kollam (205 km); Kakinada-Puducherry canals (1,078 km) and East Coast Canal integrated with Brahmani river and Mahanadi delta rivers (588 km).
The government said due to very little investment made so far on development of this mode compared globally and to the road and rail modes in the country, IWT mode remains under-developed and its share in overall internal cargo transport remains abysmally low.