The four sites — Bogibeel in Dibrugarh district, Pandu
in Kamrup (Metro) district, Silghat in Nagaon district, all along the south
bank of the river, and Biswanath Ghat in Biswanath district, the only one in
the north bank, — are located at strategic points along Brahmaputra (National
Waterway-2), one of India’s most important inland cargo and passenger
corridors. The combined project outlay for all four lighthouses stands at
approximately ₹84 crore. Each lighthouse will rise to 20 metres with a
geographical range of 14 nautical miles and a luminous range of 8–10 nautical
miles, powered entirely by solar energy. Alongside navigation infrastructure,
every site will feature a museum, amphitheatre, cafeteria, children’s play
area, souvenir shop and landscaped public spaces, positioning each lighthouse
as a tourism landmark as well as a functional maritime asset.
The commissioning
of river lighthouses on NW-2 is a direct response to a 53 percent surge in
cargo movement on the Brahmaputra waterway in the financial year 2024–25, as
recorded by IWAI. Cargo traffic on NW-2 has been growing consistently and the
Brahmaputra corridor is now integral to supply chains serving Assam’s tea, coal
and fertiliser industries, in addition to carrying passenger and tourism
traffic. The new lighthouses will enable 24×7 safe navigation, accommodate
weather observation sensors and provide the navigational infrastructure
necessary for the sustained growth of both freight and passenger movement on
the river…The foundation stone ceremony was attended by Ranjeet Kumar Dass,
Minister of Tourism, Government of Assam; Charan Boro, Minister of Transport,
Government of Assam; Jayanta Mallabaruah, Minister of Public Health
Engineering, Government of Assam; Bijuli Kalita Medhi, Member of Parliament,
Guwahati; and Siddhartha Bhattacharya, MLA, East Guwahati. Senior officials
present included Vijay Kumar, IAS, Secretary, Ministry of Ports, Shipping and
Waterways, and N. Muruganandam, Director General, DGLL.
“Waterways offer a decisive cost advantage. Moving a
tonne of cargo by inland waterway costs roughly one-third of road transport and
half of rail. For a region like Northeast India, where road infrastructure is
perpetually under pressure from both traffic and terrain, activating the
Brahmaputra as a full-scale freight corridor is not a choice but a necessity,”
Sonowal added.
The project was conceived following an initiative by
the Minister’s Office to explore the feasibility of river lighthouses in the
Northeast. A Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) between IWAI and DGLL was signed
on April 8, 2025, covering all four sites.
Sites were formally
transferred to DGLL under Right of Use agreements executed in June 2025, after
a technical proposal placed before the Central Advisory Committee for Aids to
Navigation. Each lighthouse is scheduled for completion within 24 months of
award of contract, following geotechnical investigation, topographic survey and
detailed design…The Directorate General of Lighthouses and Lightships (DGLL),
under the Ministry of Ports, Shipping and Waterways, is the statutory authority
responsible for providing aids to navigation across India’s 11,098 kilometre
coastline and now its inland waterways. The Inland Waterways Authority of India
(IWAI) administers and develops India’s network of national waterways, which
spans over 20,000 kilometres, managing infrastructure, terminals and
navigational facilities to enable cargo and passenger movement across the
country’s rivers, backwaters and creeks.
NW-2 connects
Assam’s Dhubri to Sadiya across a navigable length of 891 kilometres — the
longest navigable stretch of any Indian waterway — passing through the heart of
India’s Northeast. The four lighthouses mark the beginning of what MoPSW
describe as a wider programme to equip India’s inland waterways with the same
navigational safety infrastructure that has long governed its coasts.