Regulatory barriers to in-line water chlorination in India: a policy analysis

By Aaaaayushi? @ 2026-04-29T19:33 (+3)

Epistemic status: Moderately confident on regulatory barriers, uncertain on cost estimates which are rough order-of-magnitude only. Not a water engineer—feedback welcome.

While the expansion of piped water infrastructure in rural India through the Jal Jeevan Mission (JJM) is a historic public health achievement, the "last mile" of biological safety remains precarious. GiveWell currently funds Evidence Action’s chlorination programs in sub-Saharan Africa, where point-of-collection dispensers and in-line chlorination (ILC) have shown cost-effectiveness. However, India’s regulatory landscape presents a distinct set of barriers that explain why similar passive chlorination approaches have not yet scaled domestically—and what must change for them to do so.

The Case for In-Line Chlorination

In-line chlorination automatically disinfects water as it flows through pipes, removing the reliance on manual dosing. Recent meta-analyses (Kremer et al., 2022) suggest that water treatment interventions can reduce all-cause under-5 mortality by approximately 24% (95% CI: 3% to 40%). In India, where an estimated 37.7 million people are affected by waterborne diseases annually (Ministry of Drinking Water and Sanitation, 2016; ASSOCHAM, 2022), the potential for ILC is immense.

1. The Standard vs. Compliance Gap

The primary benchmark, IS 10500:2012, mandates a residual chlorine level of 0.2 mg/L at the consumer’s tap. However, WHO/UNICEF JMP 2024 data reveals that while 60% of rural India has "basic" water access, "safely managed" services—which require water to be free from contamination—lag significantly behind.

2. Institutional Fragmentation and Procurement

Governance is split between the Center’s funding and the State’s implementation.

3. Policy Innovation: The "Chlorine Bank" Model

To address the supply chain gap, India requires a decentralized yet regulated distribution network.

Proposed Solution: Block-level "Chlorine Banks" would function as centralized procurement and quality-testing hubs, distributing standardized TCCA tablets to Pani Samitis on a scheduled basis, similar to drug supply chain models used under the National Health Mission. Pilot estimates suggest recurring chlorine media costs of approximately $0.05–$0.15 per person per year—a fraction of the health costs associated with waterborne disease.

Comparative Barriers: India vs. Sub-Saharan Africa

FeatureEvidence Action (Africa Context)India (JJM Context)
Water SourceDecentralized boreholes/pointsMassive piped networks
RegulationFlexible/NGO-led implementationRigid IS 10500 & CPHEEO codes
Key BarrierLogistic reach & supply chainProcurement rules & taste preferences
MonitoringDirect program dataGovernment "Har Ghar Jal" Dashboard

Epistemic Status and Limitations

This analysis draws on recent meta-analyses (Kremer et al., 2022) and Evidence Action’s 2026 strategic partnership with SPM NIWAS—a national center of excellence under the Ministry of Jal Shakti focused on strengthening chlorination for safe water supply.

  1. Data Quality: Village-level residual chlorine data is often self-reported and likely suffers from social desirability bias.
  2. Uncertainty on Impact: The 24% mortality reduction is a mean estimate from global data; its specific magnitude in India’s piped systems—where re-contamination in leaky pipes is a major variable—remains less certain.

Moving Forward

To bridge the safety gap, the Ministry of Jal Shakti and technical partners should prioritize:

 

References