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  • A flooded road leaves Bandipora’s tourist village cut off from its livelihood

    A flooded road leaves Bandipora’s tourist village cut off from its livelihood

    Bandipora, May 10: On most evenings two summers ago, the lakeside in Bangladesh village would remain crowded until sunset. Cars lined the narrow road skirting Wular Lake, tourists waited for shikara rides along wooden platforms built near the shore, tea stalls stayed open late into the evening and young men ferried visitors into stretches of open water. Today, much of that same road lies under water, several shikaras have been pulled ashore and residents of this village in north Kashmir’s Bandipora district say a tourism economy that had briefly transformed the area is slowly fading with the lake’s rising waters.

    The road does not disappear suddenly. Residents say it happens in stages whenever Wular swells during spring and early summer. First, water gathers along the edges and then long stretches become difficult to distinguish from the lake itself, forcing vehicles to move cautiously through submerged portions.

    For the past two seasons, locals say, this has become a recurring reality on the link road connecting Bangladesh and neighbouring Zurimanz villages to the Bandipora-Sopore highway. Unlike the Boulevard Road running along Dal Lake in Srinagar, which sits above the water level, this road lies almost parallel to Wular at a much lower elevation, leaving it vulnerable each time snowmelt and rainfall increase the lake’s inflow.

    Residents say the villages first began attracting sustained tourist attention around two or three years ago after photographs and short videos of the area spread widely across social media platforms. The tourism department and the Wular Conservation and Management Authority (WUCMA) subsequently developed parts of the lakeside by creating viewpoints, installing a floating jetty and constructing wooden platforms for shikaras in an effort to promote the area as an eco-tourism destination.

    What followed, residents say, was the busiest tourist period the villages had witnessed in years.

    “It changed very quickly,” said a local resident associated with boating activity in the area. “Earlier people would pass through this village without stopping. Then suddenly tourists started coming specifically for this place.”

    The first two shikaras were introduced by two brothers from the village who began offering rides through sections of Wular where the lake widens into a broad bay-like stretch that locals often describe as a beach. Within a short period, according to residents, the number of shikaras increased to around 25 as more families invested savings into boats, hoping tourism would provide an alternative source of livelihood in a village largely dependent on fishing and seasonal labour.

    Now, locals say, only around eight or nine remain operational.

    The rest have been pulled onto the banks, some covered with tarpaulin sheets and others left leaning against embankments that no longer open regularly because tourist arrivals have fallen sharply over the past two seasons.

    “The problem is not the place. The problem is reaching the place,” another resident said while standing near a submerged stretch of road, he added, “That is the road. Tourists come here, see the condition and many of them return without even entering the village.”

    Residents say motorcycles avoid the route almost entirely during periods of high water levels while pedestrians frequently walk through ankle-deep or knee-deep water to cross submerged sections. During evenings, when visibility drops further, even small passenger vehicles hesitate to use the stretch. Locals say this has gradually reduced tourist arrivals, particularly among families travelling from Srinagar and other districts.

    For villagers who had reorganised their livelihoods around tourism, the slowdown has been difficult to absorb.

    One boat owner said his family had spent most of its savings constructing and decorating a wooden shikara after witnessing the tourist rush during the early phase of the boom. “There were evenings when every boat remained occupied,” he said. “People waited for rides. Children took photographs. The shore would remain crowded till late evening.” He now keeps the shikara parked near his home for long periods because visitors have declined sharply.

    Residents describe the decline as gradual but unmistakable. First, fewer travel vloggers visited the village. Then families stopped staying late into the evening. Tea stalls shut one after another. Rows of brightly painted shikaras along the shore began shrinking until the lakefront itself grew noticeably quieter.

    Officials familiar with the matter said proposals to raise the road level and strengthen vulnerable stretches have been discussed at different levels over the years.

    Executive Engineer, R&B Bandipora, Shahid Saleem told Rising Kashmir that the department has already floated tenders for the project and work is expected to begin shortly. “The project has been taken up at an estimated cost of over Rs 2.5 crore. Tenders have already been invited and we are hopeful work will start within the next 15 days,” he said.

    For residents here, the irony remains difficult to ignore. The villages became visible because of their proximity to Wular. Now the same lake that drew tourists is cutting the villages off from them.

    In the evenings, the landscape still carries the same stillness and scale that once made Bangladesh and Zurimanz trend across social media. Fishing boats continue moving through reeds, the mountains behind the villages darken slowly at sunset and the waters of Wular stretch outward like an inland sea. But along the edge of the village, the road keeps slipping beneath the lake, and with it, residents say, the brief promise that tourism had brought to Bangladesh.

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  • B’pora’s Kishanganga Power Station sets new record, crosses 1,506 MUs

    B’pora’s Kishanganga Power Station sets new record, crosses 1,506 MUs

    Highest output since commissioning

    Srinagar, Mar 18: The 330 MW Kishanganga Hydroelectric Power Station of NHPC Ltd has recorded its highest-ever cumulative power generation, crossing 1,506.52 million units (MUs) in the current financial year 2025–26, surpassing its previous best and setting a new benchmark since its commissioning in 2018.

    The milestone was achieved on the intervening night of March 17–18, when the station’s cumulative generation overtook the earlier record of 1,505.97 MUs logged in 2021–22. With around two weeks still remaining in the financial year, officials expect the figure to rise further.

    Head of Power Station and Incharge General Manager Rajesh Ranjan said the plant had already entered its highest-ever generation phase.

    “Around midnight on March 17, our cumulative generation crossed 1,506.52 million units, overtaking the previous record. With 14 days still left in the financial year, we expect this number to increase further,” he said.

    He said the current performance reflects the station’s best output since commissioning and pointed to improved operational planning and execution.

    “We are focusing on running the station at optimum efficiency while strictly maintaining safety standards. The idea has been to maximise output without compromising safety,” Ranjan said.

    He attributed the achievement to sustained coordination across teams, including planning, operations, maintenance and support units.

    “This is the result of collective effort. Our planning team, our general managers Som Nath and Arun Kumar Soni, and the powerhouse team led by Shakti Prasad Rath have all contributed. Finance and HR teams have also played an important role,” he said.

    Ranjan also acknowledged the role of contract workers and ground-level staff, saying round-the-clock work has been central to maintaining output.

    “Our teams are working 24×7, whether in operations or maintenance to ensure maximum efficiency. Contract workers, township staff and internal support teams have all put in sustained effort to achieve this result,” he said.

    Officials said the plant’s high availability during the year has helped maintain steady generation, even as hydroelectric operations in the region often face seasonal and operational constraints.

    In a statement, NHPC credited the achievement to the leadership of Chairman and Managing Director Bhupender Gupta, with technical guidance from Director Suprakash Adhikari, and support from Executive Director (Region-Jammu) Ram Swaroop and Executive Director (O&M) Indradeo Prasad Ranjan.

    Ranjan said the milestone has lifted morale within the station and set the stage for higher targets.

    “This is an important achievement for us, but also a reminder that we need to set new benchmarks going forward,” he said.

    Commissioned in 2018, the Kishanganga project is a key hydroelectric installation in north Kashmir Bandipora district and plays a significant role in meeting the region’s power demand. With the current trend, the station is set to close the financial year with its highest-ever generation.