India, May 4 -- Jharkhand's urban water crisis is no longer a future risk or a routine summer inconvenience. In April 2026, Ranchi was already deploying 50 municipal tankers as water scarcity spread across 19 to 20 of its 53 wards, while civic authorities simultaneously acknowledged deep borewells drying under heat stress and warned of the implications of a below normal rainfall outlook. In Jamshedpur, even a major public hospital was forced to depend on tankers and partially functioning borewells after acute shortages disrupted operations, and in Dhanbad the district administration had to activate emergency review mechanisms and special response teams ahead of peak summer. This is precisely the context in which the Jharkhand Rain Water H...