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RAISING IRRIGATION
WATER PRODUCTIVITY
Chapter 7. Raising Water Productivity
Lester R. Brown, Plan B: Rescuing a Planet Under Stress and a
Civilization in Trouble (W.W. Norton & Co., NY: 2003).
Historically, farm productivity was measured
in yield per hectare, since land was the constraining resource.
But as the twenty-first century begins, policymakers are beginning
to look at water as the limiting factor for food production. The
common measure that is emerging to measure water productivity is
kilograms of grain produced per ton of water.
Since 1950, world irrigated area has nearly tripled. With this growth
and with grain yields on irrigated land roughly double those on
rainfed land, irrigated land now accounts for easily 40 percent
of the world grain harvest. For China and India it is even higher.
Four fifths of China's grain harvest and close to three fifths of
India's comes from irrigated land. In the United States, one fifth
of the grain harvest comes from irrigated land.12
The relative contributions of surface water and groundwater irrigation
vary widely among countries. Of China's 51 million hectares of irrigated
land, 42 million depend on surface water and 9 million on underground
water. For India, the breakdown is 44 million hectares and 42 million
hectares, respectively, making groundwater even more important to
India.13
Although China has only 9 million hectares of land irrigated with
groundwater, this land is disproportionately productive simply because
groundwater is available precisely when the farmer needs it. By
contrast, surface water is usually delivered by canal to farmers
in local groups, usually on a rotational basis. This timing may
or may not coincide with a farmer's needs.
Although there are many ways of raising irrigation water productivity,
a few stand out. For those using surface water irrigation, reducing
seepage from the canals used to carry water from large reservoirs
to farms cuts water use. It is not unusual, particularly where distances
are long, for water seepage losses to reach 20-30 percent. This
water can be saved if canals are lined with plastic sheeting or
concretea
more costly but more long-term solution.14
A second approach is to use a more efficient technology, such as
overhead sprinkler systems. Commonly used with center-pivot irrigation
systems, their weakness is that some water is lost to evaporation
even before it hits the ground, especially in hot, arid settings.
Low-pressure sprinklers, which release water at a lower level, close
to the soil surface, lose less water through evaporation and drift.
These are now widely used in the Texas panhandle of the United States,
where aquifer depletion is encouraging farmers to use water much
more efficiently.15
The gold standard for efficiency is drip irrigation, a method that
supplies water directly to the root zone of plants. In addition
to cutting water use by up to half, drip irrigation also raises
yields because it offers a constant, carefully controlled supply
of water. Israel, where water shortages are acute, is the world
leader in developing drip technology. It is also now widely used
in other countries, including Jordan and Tunisia.16
In Jordan, for example, drip irrigation reduced water use an average
of 35 percent. Crops such as tomatoes and cucumbers typically yielded
15 percent more. The combination of reduced water use and higher
yields raised water productivity by more than half. Tunisia, where
drip-irrigated area expanded from 2,000 hectares in 1987 to 36,000
hectares in 1999, has realized similar gains.17
India in 1998 was irrigating 225,000 hectares with drip irrigation.
Thirteen experiments at Indian research institutes on several different
crops showed gains in water productivity ranging from a low of 46
percent to a high of 280 percent. (See Table 7-1.) On average, water
productivity was raised by 152 percent, more than doubling.18
Drip irrigation may be permanentthat
is, with water delivered through pipes installed underground, as
is often done for orchards, for exampleor
flexible, consisting of rubber hose or plastic tubing. The latter
typically is moved by hand every hour or so across the field and
is thus a labor-intensive system of irrigation. The traditionally
high costs of both materials and labor used for drip irrigation
are now dropping as new techniques and more flexible materials,
including plastic tubing or pipe, become available. With these recent
advances, the cost of drip irrigation systems has dropped from $1,200-2,500
per hectare to $425-625. Where water is costly, this is a financially
attractive investment. And for countries where unemployment is high
and water is scarce, the technology is ideal when it substitutes
abundant labor for scarce water.19
In recent years, the tiniest small-scale drip-irrigation systemsthe
size of a buckethave
been developed to irrigate a small vegetable garden with roughly
100 plants (25 square meters). Somewhat larger drum systems irrigate
125 square meters. In both cases, the containers are elevated slightly,
so that gravity distributes the water. Small drip systems using
plastic lines that can easily be moved are also becoming popular.
These simple systems can pay for themselves in one year. By simultaneously
reducing water costs and increasing yields, they can dramatically
raise incomes of smallholders.20
Sandra Postel believes that the combination of these drip technologies
at various scales has the potential to profitably irrigate 10 million
hectares of India's cropland, or nearly one tenth of the total.
She sees a similar potential for China, which is now also expanding
its drip irrigation area to save scarce water.21
Another technique for raising water use efficiency in both flood-
and furrow-irrigated fields is laser leveling of the land, a precise
leveling that can reduce water use by 20 percent and increase crop
yields by up to 30 percent, boosting water efficiency by half. This
practice is widely used for field crops in the United States and
for rice production in a number of countries.22
Raising crop yields is an often overlooked way of raising water
productivity. In Zhanghe Reservoir in the Yangtze River basin, where
water was becoming scarce, farmers had to share with urban and industrial
users. As a result, they simultaneously reduced water use by using
more-efficient irrigation practices and raised rice yields from
4 tons per hectare a year on average in 1966-78 to 7.8 tons per
hectare in 1989-98. The combination of lower water use and higher
crop yields almost quadrupled water productivity, raising it from
0.65 kilograms of rice per ton of water to 2.4 kilograms.23
A comparison of wheat yields between countries also shows how higher
crop yields boost water productivity. In California, where irrigated
wheat produces some 6 tons per hectare, farmers produce 1.3 kilograms
of wheat per ton of water used. But in Pakistan's Punjab, irrigated
wheat yields averaged only 2 tons per hectare or 0.5 kilograms per
ton of waterless
than 40 percent the water productivity in California.24
Yet another way of raising water productivity is to shift to more
water-efficient grains, such as from rice to wheat. The municipal
government of Beijing, concerned about acute water shortages, has
decreed that production of rice, a water-thirsty crop, should be
phased out in the region surrounding the city. Instead of planting
the current 23,300 hectares of rice, farmers will shift to other,
less water-demanding crops by 2007. Egypt, facing an essentially
fixed water supply, also restricts rice production.25
The economic efficiency of water use can also be raised by shifting
to higher-value crops, a move that is often market-driven. As water
tables fall and pumping becomes more costly, farmers in northern
China are switching from wheat to higher-value crops simply because
it is the only way they can survive economically.26
Institutional shifts, specifically moving the responsibility for
managing irrigation systems from government agencies to local water
users' associations, can facilitate the more efficient use of water.
Farmers in many countries are organizing locally so they can assume
this responsibility. Since local people have an economic stake in
good water management, they typically do a better job than a distant
government agency. In some countries, membership includes representatives
of municipal governments and other users in addition to farmers.27
Mexico is a leader in this movement. As of 2002, more than 80 percent
of Mexico's publicly irrigated land was managed by farmers' associations.
One advantage of this shift for the government is that the cost
of maintaining the irrigation system is assumed locally, reducing
the drain on the treasury. This also means that associations need
to charge more for irrigation water. Even so, for farmers the advantages
of managing their water supply more than outweigh this additional
expenditure.28
In Tunisia, where water users' associations manage both irrigation
and residential water, the number of associations increased from
340 in 1987 to 2,575 in 1999. Many other countries now have such
bodies managing their water resources. Although the early groups
were organized to deal with large publicly developed irrigation
systems, some recent ones have been formed to manage local groundwater
irrigation as well. They assume responsibility for stabilizing the
water table, thus avoiding aquifer depletion and the economic disruption
that it brings to the community.29
| Table 7-1. Water Productivity Gains When
Shifting from Conventional Surface Irrigation to Drip Irrigation
in India |
| Crop |
Changes
in Yield1
|
Changes
in Water Use
|
Water
Productivity Gain2
|
|
|
(percent)
|
|
| Bananas |
52
|
-45
|
173
|
| Cabbage |
2
|
-60
|
150
|
| Cotton |
27
|
-53
|
169
|
| Cotton |
25
|
-60
|
212
|
| Grapes |
23
|
-48
|
134
|
| Potato |
46
|
0
|
46
|
| Sugarcane |
6
|
-60
|
163
|
| Sugarcane |
20
|
-30
|
70
|
| Sugarcane |
29
|
-47
|
143
|
| Sugarcane |
33
|
-65
|
280
|
| Sweet potato |
39
|
-60
|
243
|
| Tomato |
5
|
-27
|
44
|
| Tomato |
50
|
-39
|
145
|
|
1Results from various Indian
research institutes. 2Measured as cropyield per unit of water
supplied.
Sources: See endnote 18. |
ENDNOTES:
12. Irrigated area from U.N. Food
and Agriculture Organization (FAO), FAOSTAT Statistics Database,
at apps.fao.org, updated 9 January 2003; grain harvest from USDA,
op. cit. note 3.
13. Saleth and Dinar, op. cit. note 6, pp. 25, 27.
14. Water losses detailed in Peter H. Gleick, The World's Water
2002-2003 (Washington, DC: Island Press, 2002), pp. 305-07.
15. Sandra Postel, Last Oasis (New York: W.W. Norton & Company,
1997), p. 102.
16. FAO, Crops and Drops (Rome: 2002), p. 17; Alain Vidal, Aline
Comeau, and Hervé Plusquellec, Case Studies on Water Conservation
in the Mediterranean Region (Rome: FAO, 2001), p. vii; Israel from
World Commission on Dams, Dams and Development (London: Earthscan,
2000), p. 141.
17. Jordan from World Commission on Dams, op. cit. note 16, p. 141;
Tunisia from World Bank and Swiss Agency for Development and Cooperation
(SDC), Summary Report, Middle East and North Africa Regional Water
Initiative Workshop on Sustainable Groundwater Management, Sana'a,
Yemen, 25-28 June 2000, p. 11.
18. Table 7-1 adapted from Sandra Postel et al., "Drip Irrigation
for Small Farmers: A New Initiative to Alleviate Hunger and Poverty,"
Water International, March 2001, pp. 3-13.
19. FAO, op. cit. note 16, p. 18.
20. Postel et al., op. cit. note 18.
21. Ibid.
22. Vidal, Comeau, and Plusquellec, op. cit. note 16, p. 15.
23. D. Molden et al., Increasing Productivity of Water: A Requirement
for Food and Environmental Security, Working Paper 1 (Colombo, Sri
Lanka: Dialogue on Water, Food and Environment, 2001), p. 4.
24. Ibid., p. 6.
25. Water efficiency of wheat and rice from Postel, op. cit. note
15, p. 71; Beijing from "Rice Cropped for Water," China Daily, 9
January 2002; Egypt from USDA, "Egyptian Rice Acreage Continues
to Exceed Government-Designated Limitations," Foreign Countries'
Policies and Programs, at www.fas.usda.gov/ grain/circular/1999/99-02/dtricks.htm,
posted February 1999.
26. John Wade, Adam Branson, and Xiang Qing, China Grain and Feed
Annual Report 2002 (Beijing: USDA, March 2002).
27. For more information on water users' associations, see Saleth
and Dinar, op. cit. note 6.
28. Saleth and Dinar, op. cit. note 6, p. 6.
29. World Bank and SDC, op. cit. note 17, p. 19.
Copyright
© 2003 Earth Policy Institute
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