Pimpri Chinchwad, 17th April 2026: Mounting frustration over a severe and prolonged water crisis in Pimpri-Chinchwad could soon spill onto the streets, as housing society members contemplate a protest march against the Pimpri Chinchwad Municipal Corporation (PCMC) on May 1 or 2.
The unrest follows a crucial meeting held on April 16, 2026, in PCMCтАЩs Ward D. Organized under the directives of the Bombay High Court and the Divisional Commissioner of Pune to address the cityтАЩs water scarcity, the session left citizens deeply dissatisfied. Attendees accused municipal officials of providing тАЬhollow assurancesтАЭ rather than concrete solutions.
Notably, despite the severity of the crisis, almost all elected ward members chose to skip the meeting, with only one or two corporators in attendanceтАФa fact that drew heavy criticism from the public.
Mounting Financial and Civic Toll
Representing the Pimpri Chinchwad Housing Societies Federation, Sachin Londhe, Uday Sabade, and Purushottam Patil led the discussion, backed by representatives from over 70 housing societies.
Citizens presented a 21-point charter of grievances, highlighting a crisis that has festered for over 13 years. Among the most shocking revelations was the massive financial burden placed on residents; several housing societies reported spending between тВ╣10 lakh to тВ╣1 crore annually on private water tankers.
Residents from Pimple Saudagar, Wakad, Tathawade, and Bhujbal Wasti expressed outrage over seven to eight years of irregular and often contaminated water supply. Furthermore, citizens questioned the inexplicable seven-to-nine-year delay in commissioning a water tank at Kalewadi Kaspatewasti.
тАЬCitizens are paying significantly higher property taxes, yet receiving disproportionately poor civic services,тАЭ the Federation noted, pointing out the irony that water was supplied abundantly only during the recently concluded elections.

Demand-Supply Gap and Unchecked Construction
A glaring mismatch between the cityтАЩs water requirements and its actual supply dominated the discussions. While PCMC officials cited a daily demand of 800 MLD against a current supply of just 670 MLD, citizens estimate the actual requirement to be around 810 MLD.
With approvals granted for 1 lakh to 2 lakh new residential units, residents demanded to know how the civic body plans to bridge this widening gap. A strong suggestion was made to temporarily halt all active construction in the city during the summer months to conserve water.
Citizens also demanded immediate action against builders who have obtained Occupancy Certificates (OCs) but failed to provide adequate water infrastructure. A list of such errant builders, mandated by the Divisional Commissioner in August 2025, has yet to be published by the PCMC.
Official Response
Municipal officials present at the meeting acknowledged the 130 MLD supply deficit, attributing the summer shortages to a combination of natural factors, technical constraints, and demand-supply imbalances.
Officials assured the gathering that the issues raised would be discussed extensively at the upcoming General Body meeting. They also promised that contact numbers of designated officers would be published to address individual society-level water issues.
Concluding the tense session, Sachin Londhe submitted formal written representations from nine housing societies and urged officials to promptly forward the meetingтАЩs minutes to the Divisional Commissioner.
As the summer peaks, the ball is now in PCMCтАЩs court to avert the looming citizen march in early May.
The post Pimpri-Chinchwad Residents Threaten Protest Over Severe Water Crisis; Accuse PCMC of Empty Promises at Court-Mandated Meeting appeared first on Punekar News.







