“The scheme embodies the government’s commitment to ensuring dignity, safety, and economic self-reliance for sanitation workers.” — Dr Virendra Kumar, Union Minister for Social Justice and Empowerment
On 23 April 2026, the Ministry of Social Justice and Empowerment released a progress report on the National Action for Mechanised Sanitation Ecosystem (NAMASTE) scheme, announcing significant coverage gains since its launch in FY 2023–24. Over 90,000 sewer and septic tank workers have been profiled, tens of thousands provided with protective equipment and health insurance, and nearly ₹34 crore disbursed as capital subsidy for mechanised equipment procurement.
NAMASTE represents the Government of India’s most comprehensive effort yet to eliminate hazardous manual cleaning of sewers and septic tanks — a practice that, despite being legally prohibited, continues to claim lives and perpetuate caste-based occupational bondage. The announcement comes against the backdrop of at least 453 confirmed deaths in sewer and septic tank cleaning since 2014, as reported by the Ministry in Parliament.
📜 Background: The Problem of Hazardous Sanitation Work
Manual scavenging — the removal of human excreta from dry latrines, open drains, gutters, septic tanks, or sewers by hand — was first banned in India under the Employment of Manual Scavenging and Construction of Dry Latrines (Prohibition) Act, 1993. The more comprehensive Prohibition of Employment as Manual Scavengers and their Rehabilitation (PEMSR) Act, 2013 strengthened the ban, declaring it a cognisable and non-bailable offence and making rehabilitation mandatory. Yet enforcement remained weak, and the practice persisted informally.
Government data as of 2024 shows approximately 58,000 manual scavengers remain identified, with 92% belonging to SC, ST, or OBC communities — underscoring the deeply caste-determined nature of the occupation. Between 2019 and 2023 alone, at least 377 deaths from hazardous sewer and septic tank cleaning were recorded in Parliament — averaging roughly one death every five days.
NAMASTE was conceived as the successor to the Self Employment Scheme for Rehabilitation of Manual Scavengers (SRMS), which had been operational since 2007. Recognising that hazardous sewer entry persisted under the guise of “contracted cleaning,” the government reoriented the programme in FY 2023–24 with a new focus: eliminating fatalities through full mechanisation, not just prohibition on paper.
Think of NAMASTE as a three-step rescue plan: Find every hazardous sanitation worker in India → Protect them with PPE, health insurance, and safety training → Transform them into “Sanipreneurs” who own machines and run small businesses, so no human ever needs to enter a sewer again.
✨ Structure & Implementing Agencies
NAMASTE is a Central Sector Scheme operated jointly by two ministries:
- Ministry of Social Justice and Empowerment (MoSJE) — overall policy and welfare interventions
- Ministry of Housing and Urban Affairs (MoHUA) — urban infrastructure, mechanisation, and ULB linkages
The National Safai Karamcharis Finance and Development Corporation (NSKFDC) functions as the primary national-level implementing agency. It disburses capital subsidies and concessional loans under the Swachhata Udyami Yojana (SUY). Implementation runs through a three-tier working group covering national, state, and Urban Local Body levels.
The scheme converges with Swachh Bharat Mission (SBM), DAY-NULM, and Ayushman Bharat – PM Jan Arogya Yojana (AB-PMJAY) for health insurance delivery.
| Converging Scheme | Ministry/Body | Contribution to NAMASTE |
|---|---|---|
| Swachh Bharat Mission (SBM) | MoHUA | Urban sanitation infrastructure and ULB coordination |
| DAY-NULM | MoHUA | Urban livelihoods and self-help group linkages |
| AB-PMJAY | MoHFW / NHA | Health insurance coverage for workers and families |
| Swachhata Udyami Yojana (SUY) | NSKFDC | Capital subsidy for mechanised equipment (Sanipreneurs) |
📌 Key Components & Benefits
Identification and Profiling: Digitised enumeration of sewer and septic tank workers (SSWs) across ULBs via a dedicated MIS portal. Expanded from 500 AMRUT cities to all ULBs nationwide.
Occupational Safety: Workers receive PPE kits, training on hazardous cleaning prevention, and access to Emergency Response Sanitation Units (ERSUs) — rapid-response units in larger municipal corporations equipped with specialised safety devices for sewer emergencies.
Health Insurance: Eligible workers and families enrolled under AB-PMJAY, with NAMASTE bearing the premium for those not previously covered.
Capital Subsidy — Sanipreneurs: Through Swachhata Udyami Yojana, NSKFDC provides upfront capital subsidies to sanitation workers to purchase mechanised cleaning vehicles, transforming them into “Sanipreneurs” — sanitation entrepreneurs who own equipment and provide services to ULBs under formal contracts.
Private Sector (FY 2025–26): A new provision extends upfront capital subsidy (25% of project cost) to Private Sanitation Service Organisations (PSSOs) and private contractors for procuring mechanised equipment.
Sanipreneur = A sanitation worker who owns mechanised cleaning equipment and runs a small sanitation enterprise, supplying services to ULBs under formal contract. ERSU = Emergency Response Sanitation Unit — rapid-response safety units in larger ULBs. SSW = Sewer and Septic Tank Worker.
🌍 Progress Report: Key Statistics (April 2026)
Sewer and Septic Tank Workers (SSWs):
- 90,942 workers profiled; 89,248 validated
- 87,037 provided with PPE kits
- 76,247 covered under health insurance schemes
- ₹34.17 crore released as capital subsidy to 983 workers for procurement of 364 mechanised vehicles
- 1,562 workshops on prevention of hazardous cleaning conducted nationwide
- 753 safety devices dispatched to ERSUs
Waste Pickers (added June 2024):
- 3,78,547 waste pickers profiled; 2,52,163 validated through e-KYC
- 1,31,864 provided with PPE kits
- 1,24,835 registered for Ayushman Card generation
Sanipreneurs (FY 2025–26):
- ₹14.84 crore released as capital subsidy to 320 Sanipreneurs, up from 250 beneficiaries in FY 2024–25
Don’t confuse NAMASTE with Swachh Bharat Mission. SBM is about building toilets and cleanliness infrastructure. NAMASTE is specifically about protecting the workers who maintain that infrastructure — sewer cleaners, septic tank workers, and waste pickers. Also: NAMASTE is a Central Sector Scheme (100% central funding), not a Centrally Sponsored Scheme.
✨ FY 2025–26 Enhancements
During 2025–26, the government raised the financial ceilings under the Swachhata Udyami Yojana component of NAMASTE:
- Individual projects: Capital subsidy limit enhanced from ₹5.00 lakh to ₹7.50 lakh
- Group projects (up to 5 beneficiaries): Limit raised from ₹18.75 lakh to ₹25.00 lakh
- PSSOs included: Private Sanitation Service Organisations now eligible for 25% upfront capital subsidy on mechanised equipment
These revisions reflect both inflation adjustments and an effort to make the subsidy meaningful enough to incentivise purchase of newer mechanised equipment, reducing reliance on cheap human labour.
⚖️ Legal & Constitutional Framework
The elimination of manual scavenging is grounded in two constitutional provisions:
- Article 21 — Right to life with dignity
- Article 17 — Abolition of untouchability
The PEMSR Act, 2013 remains the primary statutory instrument — banning employment of manual scavengers, mandating district-level surveys, and requiring state-level rehabilitation. As of 2023–24, 732 of India’s 766 districts had declared themselves manual scavenging-free — though independent assessments suggest a persistent gap between official declarations and ground reality.
The Supreme Court, in landmark orders, has treated sewer deaths as constitutional violations and directed the government to maintain a central portal for tracking deaths and compensation disbursement. A 2014 SC order mandated identification of all sewer deaths since 1993 and ₹10 lakh compensation to each affected family.
🌑 Challenges That Remain
Despite legislative prohibition and the NAMASTE framework, structural challenges persist. Private contractors continue to engage unprotected workers for sewer cleaning, often circumventing ULB oversight. Health risks from toxic gases — primarily methane and hydrogen sulphide — make sewer entry lethal even with PPE unless proper atmospheric testing precedes entry.
The caste dimension cannot be overlooked: as long as sanitation work is associated with specific communities through hereditary social structures, voluntary exit remains difficult even when economic alternatives are offered. NAMASTE’s “Sanipreneur” model attempts to restructure the social identity of sanitation workers from unprotected labourers to technology-owning entrepreneurs — but this transformation requires sustained institutional support well beyond financial subsidy.
NAMASTE acknowledges that prohibition alone fails without economic alternative. This reflects a broader policy lesson: laws banning exploitative practices (child labour, bonded labour, manual scavenging) succeed only when enforcement is paired with credible rehabilitation. The “Sanipreneur” model is India’s attempt to solve this — turning the stigmatised labourer into a technology entrepreneur. Is economic rebranding sufficient, or must caste identity itself be dismantled?
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NAMASTE stands for National Action for Mechanised Sanitation Ecosystem, launched in FY 2023–24. It succeeds the SRMS (Self Employment Scheme for Rehabilitation of Manual Scavengers), which had been operational since 2007.
NSKFDC (National Safai Karamcharis Finance and Development Corporation) is the primary implementing agency, disbursing capital subsidies through the Swachhata Udyami Yojana (SUY).
Waste pickers were added in June 2024 (FY 2024–25). As of April 2026, 3,78,547 waste pickers have been profiled, of whom 2,52,163 have been validated through e-KYC.
Article 17 (abolition of untouchability) and Article 21 (right to life with dignity) together form the constitutional basis for banning manual scavenging. The PEMSR Act, 2013 is the primary statutory instrument enacted under these provisions.
In FY 2025–26, the individual project limit was raised from ₹5 lakh to ₹7.50 lakh, and the group project limit (up to 5 beneficiaries) was raised from ₹18.75 lakh to ₹25 lakh.