Title: Collective Action in Canal Irrigation
1Collective Action in Canal Irrigation
- K.V.Raju
- Institute for Social and Economic Change,
Bangalore, India - Email kvraju_at_isec.ac.in
- and
- Ruth Meinzen-Dick
- IFPRI, Washington DC, USA
- Email r.meinzen-dick_at_cgiar.org
2Irrigation sources
- Canal irrigation
- Categories of major, medium, and minor
- Sources of irrigation
- Canals
- Tanks
- Lift systems
- groundwater
3Irrigation Coverage
4 Irrigation
5Vicious Cycle
6Problems
- Inadequate allocation of OM.
- Inequitable distribution of water.
- Lack of incentives for saving water.
- Poor drainage.
- Low water rate recovery
- Gap in design and actual area
- Deteriorated condition of the system.
- No measuring devices/ Control structures
7Overview
- Â Â Â Â Â Policy context
- - Devolution trends
- - Participatory irrigation management in India
- Â What conditions for collective action?
- Â Study methodology
- Â Â Findings
- -Â Factors affecting organization, collective
action - Â Â Implications
8Collective Action
- Â Â Need to look beyond registered societies
- Formal
- Informal organizations
- Relevant types of CA for irrigation
- Collective maintenance
- Collective representation
9Methodology
STATE Project Reach No of WUAs Total
Rajasthan IGNP Head 3 12
Rajasthan IGNP Middle 3 12
Rajasthan IGNP Tail 3 12
Rajasthan IGNP Purposive 3 12
Rajasthan Chambal Head 3 12
Rajasthan Chambal Middle 3 12
Rajasthan Chambal Tail 3 12
Rajasthan Chambal Purposive 3 12
Karnataka KRS Head 3 12
Karnataka KRS Middle 3 12
Karnataka KRS Tail 3 12
Karnataka KRS Purposive 3 12
Karnataka UKP Head 3 12
Karnataka UKP Middle 3 12
Karnataka UKP Tail 3 12
Karnataka UKP Purposive 3 12
10Organisations CA
- Â
- Formal Organizations 25
- Informal Organizations 8 Â
- Collective Maintenance 60
- Joint interaction 75
11Resources mobilised for CA
- Interaction with officials
- Rs 1,483/ minor (cash only)
- Â Collective maintenance
- Rs 16,534/ minor
- Rs 311/ farm
- Rs 75/ ha (cash labor)
12Conclusions
- More likely to find organizations where
- Â Â Â larger minor commands
- Â Â Â closer to markets
- Â Â Â active temples
- Â Â Â college graduates
- Â Â Â influential persons
- (not affected by head/tail, coops)
13conclusions
- Organizations are a means, not an end
- Â Â Â not all are active
- Â Â Â look for collective action
- Collective action
- more often for lobbying than maintenance
- organizations increase CA for maintenance, not
lobbying - CA can mobilize significant resources
- not full substitute for government, irrigation
fees
14Andhra Pradesh Story
15AP-PIM focus
- Irrigation Policy
- APFMIS Act, 1997.
- Clear roles responsibilities for WUAs and Govt
agencies - Financial control
- Fee collection retention
- Operation maintenance by users
16Rationale- AP-PIM
- Better O M
- Adequate Timely water supply
- Improved supply to tailend areas
- Farmers involvement in irrigation management
- Sense of ownership
- Social audit, water budgeting, water management
17Structure of WUA
Medium
PC
WUA
18(No Transcript)
19Benefits
- Â
- Â Â Â Â Â Â 10.07 lakh acres gap command area
reduced - Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Tail end problems reduced
- Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Production increased to 140 lakh Tonnes
- Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Farmers got 5-10 bags extra Paddy
- Â Â Â Â Â Â Â No crop submersion flood waters
quickly drained - Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Execution of Works with Speed
Quality - Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Estimated Rates ( No Excess)
- Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Farmers participated Owners
- Money given directly to WUAs