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Options for ProPoor Water Reforms

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The poor in Asia Pacific region are concentrated in environmentally fragile ecological zones ... Water reform options in this area are likely to remain perfunctory ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Options for ProPoor Water Reforms


1
Options for Pro-Poor Water Reforms
  • SIMI KAMAL
  • Member GWP TEC
  • Chairperson, Hisaar Foundation

2
  • Context
  • The greater part of the worlds poor reside in
    Asia Pacific region (75 percent)
  • The poor in Asia Pacific region are concentrated
    in environmentally fragile ecological zones
  • Millennium development goal of halving world
    poverty by the year 2015
  • Current trend of establishing Integrated Water
    Resources management
  • We have to ask the question can we really
    reduce poverty through water reforms?

3
Scope of Paper
  • Experience from the Asia Pacific region
  • Case study from Pakistan
  • Rationale for pro-poor water reform options

4
What Does Water Reforms Mean?
  • The term water reform is usually understood to
    cover
  • Governance
  • Laws
  • Institutions
  • Processes
  • Regulations

5
Access and Control Over Land
  • In Asia Pacific Region
  • Economic and social disparities distort access to
    land and water
  • Existing social and cultural biases further
    distort the intent of inheritance laws
  • Inadequacies of legal structure limits ownership
    and control by poor women and other disadvantaged
    groups

6
  • The relationship between water and poverty is
    often determined by some external factors
  • Political will and political representation
  • Local government linkages and decentralization

7
Four distinct sectors in the debate
  • Irrigation systems and poverty reduction
  • Land and water rights in relation to poverty
  • Reduction of poverty through participation and
    user management
  • Environment, poverty and conservation

8
Size of Land Holdings
  • In the Asia Pacific region the average farm size
    is now approximately 1.6 hectares.
  • In China average farm size has fallen from 0.56
    hectares in 1980 to 0.4 hectares in 1999.
  • In Pakistan it has fallen from 5.3 hectares in
    1973 to under 3 hectares in 2004.
  • In comparison the average farm size is 67
    hectares in Latin America.

9
Irrigation Systems and Poverty Reduction
  • Irrigation has long been seen as a main tool of
    reducing poverty
  • It is seen as a package of technologies,
    institutions and policies that underpins
    increased agricultural output in the Asia Pacific
    region
  • Past experience has shown that this package has
    not yet fully succeeded in doing away with
    poverty
  • Similar irrigation reform packages in different
    contexts have different results

10
  • In China irrigation and agriculture have
    developed in the context of a long-term national
    program to eradicate poverty
  • Vietnam has adopted fair land distribution
    approach to land (and irrigation water), and
    rural development as a whole
  • In Indonesia, irrigation development has been
    part of a large transmigration scheme funded by
    government
  • South Asia has adopted policy in which
    distributional issues have largely been ignored
  • Irrigation reforms have benefited the poor in
    China and Vietnam much more than in South Asia

11
Irrigation Benefits
  • Indirect broader benefits of irrigation usually
    much larget than direct local-level benefits
  • This means less impact on local poverty
  • Despite overall poverty-reducing nature of
    irrigation, income poverty exists in most canal
    irrigated areas
  • Around a third of all households in irrigation
    systems live in overty

12
Water Rights, Land Rights and Poverty
  • Water rights are understood and internalized
    largely as customary practices
  • Regulations on water rights are often unclear and
    incomplete
  • Water users may have little knowledge of the laws
    and regulations that define formal water rights

13
What are Water Rights?
  • Water rights may be composed of various bundles
    of rights to access, consume, manage and transfer
  • Water rights are usually structured differently
    and are more limited than rights to land and
    movable property
  • The term water use rights seems more
    appropriate
  • Water rights are usually a form of property
    rights
  • Secure property rights can play a vital role in
    expanding opportunities for poor people to escape
    from poverty

14
Reduction of Poverty through Participation and
User Management
15
  • Past 25 years have been many attempts to improve
    irrigation management through increased
    participation
  • This was driven in part by
  • frustration with irrigation operation and
    maintenance
  • head-tail inequalities in water distribution
  • Neglected repairs
  • Lack of resources for maintaining infrastructure

16
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17
Token particpation
  • Meetings held
  • Water user associations formed
  • Trainings conducted
  • These are used to measure user participation and
    management instead ofsubstantive shanges

18
Participation in political vacuum
  • Water user groups can end up as political
    pressure groups with aspirtions other than
    equitable distribution of water
  • Show little result in terms of increased incomes
    or reduced costs
  • No set of agreed indicators on what is pro-poor
    participatory management

19
Water conservation and enviroment
  • Policies on water conservation often disregard
    livelihoods of men and women
  • The poor depend heavily on environmental goods
  • Sometimes one kind of right (for example water
    irrigation right) can take away another (access
    to common enviromental goods)

20
Struggling to Address Poverty Through Water
Reforms The Case of Pakistan
21
Pakistans Water Scenario
  • The vulnerability of the vast Indus Basin
    irrigation system and greater need for operating
    flexibility and assurance is now accepted in
    Pakistan
  • High population growth
  • Persistent poverty
  • Lagging growth in the rural sector
  • Looming constraints on water resources for
    irrigation
  • Poor development and management strategy

22
Poverty Conditions
  • Realities of water availability, its regime, the
    climate, weather, delta conditions and the market
    have changed
  • The way of managing farms and using water at farm
    level has not
  • About 45 of cultivable area is under
    cultivation
  • Poor management and distribution of irrigation
    water has rendered a large area of land
    uncultivable

23
  • Low crop yield
  • Thousands of local farmers whose livelihood
    depended on agriculture are facing economic
    hardship
  • 97 percent of 140 MAF of surface water used in
    irrigation, managed by public sector
  • Unchecked exploitation of groundwater in private
    sector (20 MAF)

24
Comparison of Productivity Per Unit of Land and
Water
25
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26
Low Irrigation Charges as a benefit to Poor
  • The very low irrigation service charges in
    Pakistan are justified on account of poverty and
    are assumed to benefit the poor
  • In the setting of inequities in land and water
    distribution the low level of irrigation charge
    does not necessarily benefit the poor
  • Low charges lead to under-spending on OM works
    and the system performance is very poor

27
  • The application of a single level of irrigation
    service charges across areas and system has led
    to a situation where the poor landless farmers
    end up subsidizing the rich landowners.

28
Land Tenancy System Poverty
  • The existing pattern of land distribution
    in Pakistan is not egalitarian
  • Organization of production is heavily
    dominated by sharecropping arrangements where
    the tenants are insecure
  • Unless the tenants position is improved, the
    landowners are likely to receive a lions
    share of the total benefits of watercourse
    improvement, a substantial part of which is
    being subsidized by the government.

29
Water Sector Reforms
  • Government of Pakistan has embarked upon water
    sector reforms in the country
  • These have been implemented in parts of the
    irrigated areas of the two larger provinces,
    Punjab and Sindh
  • These reforms have combined irrigation and
    drainage functions into single Provincial
    Irrigation and Drainage Authorities supported by
    Water Management Ordinances 2002
  • The idea is to move towards farmer management of
    both irrigation and drainage

30
Participatory Institutions Set Up as Part of
Water Sector Reforms
  • Area Water Boards (AWBs)
  • Farmer Organizations (FOs)
  • Watercourse Associations (WCAs)
  • These participatory organizations are to slowly
    take over the rehabilitation and maintenance of
    10 canal command areas

31
The Reality on the Ground
  • In theory the system sounds equitable and
    feasible
  • The problem arises in the way the Ordinance
    defines a farmer who may become a member of the
    Farmer Organization
  • This farmer is one who owns land
  • This leaves out the majority of farmers that
    actually deal with water on a daily basis and
    till the land the poor landless sharecroppers.

32
What Can be Done
  • In order to enhance the probability of the
    benefits of water rehabilitation and
    infrastructure development reaching the poor
    landless farmers, the inclusion of both men and
    women from this group is necessary in the WCAs
    and FOs
  • Such inclusions many not be forthcoming
    substantively in the short term
  • It can be fostered through offering
    infrastructure development and repair investment
    incentives on high priority to those WCAs and FOs
    that include landless sharecroppers and women

33
Official Government Policy
  • Integrating irrigation, hydropower and
    agricultural development investment
  • Modernizing both the water infrastructure and the
    institutional and governances management systems
  • Balance of investments in water infrastructure
    and water management
  • Balance in supply management and demand
    management
  • Secure water entitlements or rights

34
Government Strategy
  • The new initiatives in the water sector are
    modeled to recover the maintenance and
    restoration cost
  • Water Conservation
  • Renovation of remaining 90,000 watercourses
    (45,000 out of 135,000 have already been lined)
  • Improving watercourse maintenance
  • Organizing sustainable water users associations
    (WUAs)
  • Introducing water saving irrigation technology

35
Realities!
  • Expenditure on water supply and sanitation
    (normally held to be the most pro-poor of water
    programmes) for the year 2006-2007 was projected
    as 0.12 of the GDP
  • Current annual development plans claim to spend
    approximately 40-50 percent each year on water
    infrastructure resources development the type
    of development that does not generally benefit
    the poor
  • Not clear how water entitlements and rights are
    to be secured
  • Not clear how the demand for more irrigation
    water will be balanced with need for conservation
    and environmental flows
  • The mighty river Indus has no water downstream
    from Kotri Barrage for 10 months of the year and
    the Indus delta has been effectively destroyed.

36
Rationale for Pro-Poor Water Reform Options
37
Defining Pro-Poor More Clearly
  • Any arguments for and policy for pro-poor water
    reform must clarify what is meant by the term
    pro-poor
  • Too often pro-poor intervention is taken to mean
    any investment or programme that creates physical
    facilities and institutions, the socio-economic
    performance of which is seen in terms of
    aggregate benefits to society as a whole not
    specific benefits to defined groups of the poor.

38
Measuring the Pro-Poor in Water Reforms
  • For water reforms to be pro-poor, the criteria
    should be not only be the change in the
    structures of water institutions, the new laws,
    the number of hectares developed or
    rehabilitated, but also the number of households
    and persons who benefited and by how much.
  • We need to be able to measure not only the
    aggregate productivity benefits but also the
    various types of benefits (economic, social,
    development, political) and the share of the poor
    in total benefits

39
Need for Separate Sets of Indicators
  • To define specific benefits to the poor and then
    to measure their achievement requires different
    sets of appropriate indicators for different
    contexts
  • For water entitlements as part of access to
    environmental goods
  • For water rights as groups, individuals and
    institutions in irrigation and agriculture
  • For access to potable water in rural and urban
    contexts (where the poor may pay many times more
    than the rich).

40
  • A look at Asia Pacific experiences has shown that
    no single set of water reform interventions have
    been sufficient for effective poverty alleviation
    in all water sectors
  • A balanced and realistic approach is required
    under each set of circumstances
  • An effective package of pro-poor water reforms
    may require interventions in areas other than
    water
  • This points towards more proactive use of IWRM
    approaches that calls for a balance among water
    efficiency, equity and environmental
    sustainability

41
Approaching Different Water Reform Sectors
  • We have seen how different factors impact upon
    different sectors of water use and management
  • To be pro-poor each of these sectors would have
    to work with different sets of interventions
    under different conditions
  • Sometimes reform processes will have to create
    the necessary conditions first, within which
    pro-poor approaches can be realized

42
Pro-Poor Irrigation Reforms
  • Irrigation and agriculture reforms are likely to
    generate significant outcomes for the poor only
    if some or all of the following conditions exist
    or can be created
  • - Land holdings are more or less of the same size
    (and not skewed between some huge farms and many
    tiny ones) or land is better distributed through
    land reforms
  • - Farmers are socio-economically homogeneous (ie
    all hold land titles rather than some owning land
    while the others are landless and caught in a
    system of sharecropping land tenure) and can
    compete for benefits equally
  • - Irrigated agriculture is profitable as a whole

43
  • - Actual benefits of irrigation go to all types
    of farmers (both land owners and the landless)
    and can be easily calculated
  • - There are incentives in place for better
    managing service delivery and quality
  • - Farmers pay for water based on satisfactory
    service delivery (ie service providers are made
    accountable)
  • - Irrigation schemes and programmes are
    specifically designed to benefit the poor by
    putting in specific conditions for investments,
    repairs and rehabilitation of water
    infrastructure

44
Water Rights Reform
  • In terms of water rights as a means of
    alleviating poverty, in situations where land
    ownership determine water rights, it is land
    ownership that needs to be tackled effectively as
    a pro-poor intervention
  • In cases where a right to quantum of water is
    determined by type of use, tradition or legal
    entitlement, water reform will need to ensure
    that all those that are entitled are clearly
    defined as such, through legal recourse.

45
  • Given that the Asia Pacific region has millions
    of farmers, both land holding and landless, and
    millions of people who have direct environmental
    entitlements, it would be extremely challenging,
    if not impossible, to recognize individual water
    rights
  • Water rights can be held by collective
    organizations such as water user associations,
    local government and water utilities.
  • However in a region of many inequalities, this
    option would be open to abuse
  • The argument for the role that secure rights to
    land can play in reducing poverty are much more
    compelling in the Asia Pacific context than water
    rights

46
Poor-Poor Participation Reform
  • As yet no set of agreed indicators to show
    poverty reduction or degree of pro poor-ness as
    a result of stakeholder participatory and user
    management of water
  • Water reform options in this area are likely to
    remain perfunctory
  • Indicators need to be developed
  • Ways found to determine the direct and impacts of
    participatory decision-making and user
    management, especially in circumstances where the
    participants are socially or economically
    unequal.

47
Water Conservation Reform
  • There has been perhaps the greatest thrust in
    terms of water reform initiatives in this area
  • There has to be a stated and proactive pro-poor
    affirmative action (of the type seen in womens
    empowerment movements and interventions)
  • Conservation attempts often end up displacing the
    very poor whose survival depends on environmental
    entitlements
  • Water conservation projects can undergo a process
    to explicitly state the number of poor people,
    the nature of their water entitlements, and how
    they can be helped to come out of poverty (or at
    least be prevented from becoming even poorer).

48
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