H13L-01:
DECLINING GROUNDWATER LEVELS IN NORTH INDIA: UNDERSTANDING SOURCES OF IRRIGATION INEFFICIENCY

Monday, 15 December 2014: 1:40 PM
Jimmy O'Keeffe1, Wouter Buytaert2, Ana Mijic1 and Nicholas Brozovic3, (1)Imperial College London, London, SW7, United Kingdom, (2)Imperial College London, Civil and Environmental Engineering and Grantham Institute for Climate Change, London, SW7, United Kingdom, (3)University of Illinois, Urbana, IL, United States
Abstract:
Over the last half century, the green revolution has transformed India from a famine-prone, drought-susceptible country, into the world’s third largest grain producer and one of the most intensely irrigated regions on the planet. This is in no small part due to the country's vast water resources along with an increase in tubewells and more advanced abstraction methods. While agricultural intensification has had undeniable benefits, it has, and continues to have a significant impact on water resources. Unless solutions which take into consideration the ever evolving socio-economic, hydrological and climatic conditions are found, India's agricultural future looks bleak.

This research examines the irrigation behaviour of farmers, using data collected during field work in the State of Uttar Pradesh within the Ganges Basin of North India. Significant differences in farmer behaviour and irrigation practices are highlighted, not only between State districts but between individual farmers. This includes the volume of irrigation water applied and the price paid, as well as differences in the yields of crops produced. Analyses of results suggest that this is due to a number of factors, particularly the source of irrigation water. Study areas which had access to cheaper, but crucially less reliable, canal water were found to invest in more efficient water saving technologies in order to reduce the overall cost of irrigation during periods where less expensive canal water is not available. As a result, overall water use and irrigation cost is lower and yields are higher despite very similar climatic conditions. While cheap canal water is not an option for all farmers, the results show that the introduction of more efficient water saving technologies, despite the significant capital expenditure is a viable option for many farmers and costs can be recovered in a relatively short space of time. In addition, the reduction of declining water levels mean that water is abstracted from a shallower depths, resulting in an extra cost saving.

The impacts and practicalities of introducing more water efficient technologies are discussed and their potential impact on water resources and farmer livelihoods, pointing the way to a realistic and more sustainable balance between agriculture and sustainable water resources in the future.