Financial/economic incentives to support water savings and water productivity improvements in Uzbekistan [Abstract only]

Agriculture is an essential sector of Uzbekistan’s economy, with 17.6% of GDP in 2016 and engaging about 26% of the labor force. Having dry climatic conditions, with annual rainfall of 100–300 mm, agriculture is an abundant consumer of the country’s natural resources. More precisely, the agricultura...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Anarbekov, Oyture, Solieva, G. N. U.
Formato: Conference Paper
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/100661
_version_ 1855535298150137856
author Anarbekov, Oyture
Solieva, G. N. U.
author_browse Anarbekov, Oyture
Solieva, G. N. U.
author_facet Anarbekov, Oyture
Solieva, G. N. U.
author_sort Anarbekov, Oyture
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Agriculture is an essential sector of Uzbekistan’s economy, with 17.6% of GDP in 2016 and engaging about 26% of the labor force. Having dry climatic conditions, with annual rainfall of 100–300 mm, agriculture is an abundant consumer of the country’s natural resources. More precisely, the agricultural sector constitutes 92% of Uzbekistan’s total water use, which is on average of 56 billion cubic meters of water. This is equal to 60% of all water use in Central Asia. By 2020, irrigated area of Uzbekistan is forecast to increase between 5 and 11% and overall demand for water resources could increase up to 19%. Taking into account the growing pressure on water resources, the Government of Uzbekistan is introducing water conservation policies to mitigate existing and future stresses to water sector. However, to date neither incentives to introduce water saving technologies nor penalties on water users for violating the order of water use have been effective. A lack of incentives for water savings is a key factor affecting water use decisions. In Uzbekistan, water supply for water users (municipal services, agriculture, industry, energy, etc.) is at the expense of the state budget and considered free of charge for the users. Thus, government interventions aimed at the rational use of water resources have minimal impact. This could explain the fact that water application by farmers often exceeds, by several times, the biological requirement for agricultural crops. The objective of this study is to investigate financial/economic incentives to support water savings and water productivity improvements at on-farm level in Uzbekistan. To undertake this research the two-part tariff methodology is being applied as an experiment in three selected Water Consumer Associations in three Provinces of Uzbekistan, representing varied natural and climatic regions. Mini-gauging stations were installed and used as so call Smartsticks (low-cost, crowd-sensed technology) to measure discharge. The approach estimates the constant and variable expenses of Water Consumer Associations (WCA) when the water fee is simultaneously linked with crop area and water volume. The results will show the effects of water pricing (i.e. Irrigation service fee) and whether payment for irrigation water can influence the water consumption behavior of farmers. The study outcomes can form the base to recommend new water payment policies at the WCAs level, which in turn can have widespread influence on rational water use and collected revenue for water delivering organizations across regions.
format Conference Paper
id CGSpace100661
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2018
publishDateRange 2018
publishDateSort 2018
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace1006612023-06-08T20:16:49Z Financial/economic incentives to support water savings and water productivity improvements in Uzbekistan [Abstract only] Anarbekov, Oyture Solieva, G. N. U. water productivity water conservation economic aspects financing agricultural sector water accounting water users associations water use water resources water rates water delivery Agriculture is an essential sector of Uzbekistan’s economy, with 17.6% of GDP in 2016 and engaging about 26% of the labor force. Having dry climatic conditions, with annual rainfall of 100–300 mm, agriculture is an abundant consumer of the country’s natural resources. More precisely, the agricultural sector constitutes 92% of Uzbekistan’s total water use, which is on average of 56 billion cubic meters of water. This is equal to 60% of all water use in Central Asia. By 2020, irrigated area of Uzbekistan is forecast to increase between 5 and 11% and overall demand for water resources could increase up to 19%. Taking into account the growing pressure on water resources, the Government of Uzbekistan is introducing water conservation policies to mitigate existing and future stresses to water sector. However, to date neither incentives to introduce water saving technologies nor penalties on water users for violating the order of water use have been effective. A lack of incentives for water savings is a key factor affecting water use decisions. In Uzbekistan, water supply for water users (municipal services, agriculture, industry, energy, etc.) is at the expense of the state budget and considered free of charge for the users. Thus, government interventions aimed at the rational use of water resources have minimal impact. This could explain the fact that water application by farmers often exceeds, by several times, the biological requirement for agricultural crops. The objective of this study is to investigate financial/economic incentives to support water savings and water productivity improvements at on-farm level in Uzbekistan. To undertake this research the two-part tariff methodology is being applied as an experiment in three selected Water Consumer Associations in three Provinces of Uzbekistan, representing varied natural and climatic regions. Mini-gauging stations were installed and used as so call Smartsticks (low-cost, crowd-sensed technology) to measure discharge. The approach estimates the constant and variable expenses of Water Consumer Associations (WCA) when the water fee is simultaneously linked with crop area and water volume. The results will show the effects of water pricing (i.e. Irrigation service fee) and whether payment for irrigation water can influence the water consumption behavior of farmers. The study outcomes can form the base to recommend new water payment policies at the WCAs level, which in turn can have widespread influence on rational water use and collected revenue for water delivering organizations across regions. 2018 2019-04-01T09:57:27Z 2019-04-01T09:57:27Z Conference Paper https://hdl.handle.net/10568/100661 en Open Access Anarbekov, Oyture; Solieva, G. N. U. 2018. Financial/economic incentives to support water savings and water productivity improvements in Uzbekistan [Abstract only] In American Society of Agricultural and Biological Engineers (ASABE); Indian Society of Agricultural Engineers (ISAE). Global Water Security Conference for Agriculture and Natural Resources. (Abstract Books). Hyderabad, India, 3-6 October 2018. Michigan, USA: American Society of Agricultural and Biological Engineers (ASABE); New Delhi, India: Indian Society of Agricultural Engineers (ISAE). pp.120.
spellingShingle water productivity
water conservation
economic aspects
financing
agricultural sector
water accounting
water users associations
water use
water resources
water rates
water delivery
Anarbekov, Oyture
Solieva, G. N. U.
Financial/economic incentives to support water savings and water productivity improvements in Uzbekistan [Abstract only]
title Financial/economic incentives to support water savings and water productivity improvements in Uzbekistan [Abstract only]
title_full Financial/economic incentives to support water savings and water productivity improvements in Uzbekistan [Abstract only]
title_fullStr Financial/economic incentives to support water savings and water productivity improvements in Uzbekistan [Abstract only]
title_full_unstemmed Financial/economic incentives to support water savings and water productivity improvements in Uzbekistan [Abstract only]
title_short Financial/economic incentives to support water savings and water productivity improvements in Uzbekistan [Abstract only]
title_sort financial economic incentives to support water savings and water productivity improvements in uzbekistan abstract only
topic water productivity
water conservation
economic aspects
financing
agricultural sector
water accounting
water users associations
water use
water resources
water rates
water delivery
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/100661
work_keys_str_mv AT anarbekovoyture financialeconomicincentivestosupportwatersavingsandwaterproductivityimprovementsinuzbekistanabstractonly
AT solievagnu financialeconomicincentivestosupportwatersavingsandwaterproductivityimprovementsinuzbekistanabstractonly