Title: India
1Indias Irrigation Economy
- In the throes of a transition..
Tushaar Shah International Water Management
Institute www.iwmi.org
2Highlights
- History of Indian irrigation Three Phases and a
Turning Point. - Since 1975, Indian agriculture has emerged as the
worlds largest user of groundwater to grow food
and fibre. - The groundwater boom is fired by population
pressure on land and demands of intensive
diversification of farming. - India and Pakistan together lost over 5 million
ha of canal irrigated areas tubewells are
canibalizing flow irrigation. - Investing in flow irrigation under BAU is
throwing good money after bad. - Indias irrigation challenge is one of managing
its sub-continental aquifer systems, a vast
reservoir we have left unmanaged.
3Evolution of Indian IrrigationEra of adaptive
irrigation-upto 1830
- Community was the unit of irrigation management
Contribution to aggregate Farm output and
incomes
Rainfall and Soil moisture
Flow irrigation from tanks, canals, rivers
Lift irrigation from wells and surface sources
of water consumptively used in agriculture
4Evolution of Indian IrrigationEra of canal
construction-1830-1970
- State emerged as the architect, builder, manager
of irrigation
Soil moisture management
Contribution to aggregate Farm output and
incomes
Flow irrigation from tanks, canals, rivers
Lift irrigation from wells surface sources
water consumptively used in agriculture
5Evolution of Indian IrrigationEra of atomistic
pump irrigation-1970-todate
- Individual farmer as the irrigation manager
Contribution To Farm output incomes
Soil moisture management
Flow irrigation
Pump irrigation from wells, tubewells, canals
of water consumptively used in agriculture
6India is the worlds largest userof groundwater
in agriculture in the world.
India has over 20 million irrigation wells. We
add 0.8 million/year. Every fourth cultivator
owns an irrigation well non-owners depend on
groundwater markets.
7Groundwater share in irrigated Areas 70 and
rising
Kharif Rabi
pump flow pump flow
cereals 64.3 36.1 77.8 22.2
pulses 68.6 31.4 66.3 33.7
oilseeds 78.8 21.2 72.7 27.3
mixed crops 90.9 9.1 67.7 32.3
sugarcane 81.9 18.1 86 14
other crops 65.5 34.5 82.8 17.2
vegetables 67.4 32.6 74.9 26.1
fruit and nuts 81.9 18.1 83.9 16.1
plantation 72.7 27.3 72.9 27.1
fibre crops70.4 70.4 29.6 86.5 13.5
fodder 79.7 20.3 86.9 13.1
other crops 84.7 15.3 59.2 41.8
all 69 31 76.5 23.5
Govt. numbers Suggest 60 Irrigated areas Depend
on GW, But
National Sample Survey, 2003, 59th
roundProportion of area under different
irrigated crops Served by pump and flow
irrigation
8Pump irrigation expansion is driven by
population pressure on farm lands..
Throughout the world, intensive groundwater
irrigation is a response to water scarcity. Not
in South Asia. Here, it is a response to
scarcity of farm lands. The rise of a
water-scavenging irrigation economy..
60 of tubewells in use Were made during
the 1990s numbers are Still accelerating..
9Minor Irrigation Census 2001Districts with high
rural population density experience intensive
well irrigation
10Our irrigation planning is preoccupied with food
grains Indian farmer is diversifying in a hurry.
Canal and tank irrigated areas condemned to
low-value crops unresponsive to precision
irrigation. Much diversification is Occurring
outside Command areas (IFPRI). Much
diversification Requires small dozes
of Year-round, on-demand Irrigation. Value added
farming Will expand with Waste-water irrigation
and Groundwater.
11Area irrigated by public canals are stagnant
despite growing investment in public irrigation.
12Throughout South Asia, surface irrigation is
giving Way to pump irrigation. India, Pakistan
and Bdesh Lost 5.5 m ha of surface irrigation
during 1994-2001
This process has gathered Momentum since 1995
Pump irrigation is cannibalizing flow irrigation.
Irrigation systems are unable to Support
groundwater irrigation
13For sustainable irrigation, conjunctive
managementof ground and surface water is
essential.
Mismatch between ground and surface irrigation
in India 578 districts covered by Minor
Irrigation Cesus 2001 (GoI 2005)
Effective conjunctive management Means more well
irrigation in command Areas. In Indian
districts, the situation is the opposite.
Only 12 of Indias wells are In command areas
and this Proportion is dropping every year
14Implications 1Wake up to new realities.
- Recognize and respond to the new reality.
Governments role as irrigation provider is no
longer the most critical. - Investing in surface irrigation is throwing good
money after bad.. - Irrigation reforms around PIM are doomed to
failure because flow irrigation itself is
ebbing.. - Irrigation Departments mission statement needs
to be rewritten.
15Implications 2Groundwater recharge is the game
we must master.
- Surface water dams deliver 150 km3/year
- aquifer system delivers 220 km3/year which is far
more productive. - Managing the sub-continental system of aquifers
ought to be Indias top priority but this is
nobodys concern. - India gets 4000 km3 of precipitation we use
- 220 km3 of groundwater. Nature itself puts 4-10
of rainfall into aquifers. If we focus recharge
effort at the right places, sustaining
groundwater irrigation is possible. - The challenge is to increase recharge in arid
areas (north-west) - and hardrock aquifers (peninsular India).
-
16Implications 3Reinvent surface irrigation
management.
- We need new institutional models to arrest
erosion of public irrigation commands. - What Indian farmer demands is on-farm water he
can scavenge at will for high frequency
precision-irrigation wells will always score on
canals and tanks. - Rajasthans program of lined farm ponds on Indira
Gandhi Nahar Yojana canal water fill up the pond
every 21 days farmer run sprinklers with it. - Gujarat governments new scheme to create local
irrigation entrepreneurs who will lay
drip-irrigation infrastructure and operate an
irrigation service from public canals. - Maharashtras experiments in Northern Krishna
basin. -
17Implications 4high crop/drop
- Accelerate agricultural diversification
- Embrace and propagate water saving farming
systems aerobic rice, System of Rice
Intensification, - Zero-tillage, alternate wet-and-dry irrigation.
- Reform micro-irrigation subsidies that shrink
drip-and-sprinkler equipment market instead of
expanding it.
18Implications 5Practical strategy for
groundwater management
- Evolve a practical, implementable tool-kit for
groundwater management. - Groundwater laws are unenforceable pricing is
impractial GW Authoritys writ does not run in
the country-side. - Indirect instruments
- Punjabs experiment with electricity supply and
rice procurement schedules to shift rice
transplanting. - Gujarats Jyotirgram Yojana of rationing quality
power to farmers for irrigation
19Source Down to Earth