THE HAGUE: On the final leg of his official tour, Prime Minister Narendra Modi, accompanied by Dutch Prime Minister Rob Jetten, visited the historic Afsluitdijk, the Netherlands’ iconic 32-kilometer-long flood protection dam and causeway.
The high-profile field visit explicitly spotlighted the structural parallels between the Netherlands’ world-class flood defense networks and India’s multi-billion dollar engineering plans in Gujarat.
The Kalpasar Connection: Turning Sea into Freshwater
The prime focus of the visit was to draw a direct blueprint from the Afsluitdijk to advance India’s ambitious Kalpasar Project in Gujarat.
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The Vision: The Kalpasar initiative intends to construct a massive sea dam across the Gulf of Khambhat to establish a colossal freshwater reservoir. Once completed, it will integrate tidal power generation, heavy-duty irrigation pipelines, and a regional transportation causeway.
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The Pact: Solidifying this vision, the Ministry of Jal Shakti of India and the Ministry of Infrastructure and Water Management of the Netherlands signed a formal Letter of Intent (LoI) for technical cooperation on the Kalpasar project.
Strategic Partnership on Water
The Afsluitdijk stands as a global engineering benchmark for land reclamation and blocking severe North Sea storm surges while safely securing domestic freshwater reserves.
The two prime ministers noted that combining premium Dutch expertise in hydraulic engineering with India’s massive scale of project execution creates a powerful alliance under the India-Netherlands Strategic Partnership on Water. The collaboration is expected to bring next-generation delta-management systems and sustainable climate-resilient infrastructure directly to India’s coastlines.

