Sustaining tank irrigation in South India through time-tested measures

The century old irrigation tanks mostly found in south India account for about 1/3 of rice irrigated areas and largely benefit the small and marginal farmers. The current performance of these tanks is below the 50 percent level. Major factors contributing to their declining performance are: erratic...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Kuppannan, Palanisami, Thangavel, M.
Formato: Capítulo de libro
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/114838
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author Kuppannan, Palanisami
Thangavel, M.
author_browse Kuppannan, Palanisami
Thangavel, M.
author_facet Kuppannan, Palanisami
Thangavel, M.
author_sort Kuppannan, Palanisami
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description The century old irrigation tanks mostly found in south India account for about 1/3 of rice irrigated areas and largely benefit the small and marginal farmers. The current performance of these tanks is below the 50 percent level. Major factors contributing to their declining performance are: erratic rainfall pattern and reduced inflows (hydrology side); poor management of the tanks (tank side); ineffective water control & poor groundwater development (farmers’ side). Given the future impacts of climate change on water resources, sustaining tank irrigation is considered important. Evidence shows that developing an interface between tank ecosystems and wells is expected to augment water supplies, improve tank management and boost tank irrigation. This paper outlines a five-pronged strategy to achieve this: a) partial rehabilitation (partial desilting); b) full scale tank rehabilitation; c) converting tanks into percolation ponds; d) converting non-system tanks into system tanks; e) full scale groundwater development (tapping the full groundwater potential). Financial viability of the strategy also varies according to the scale and size of the investments and the expected benefits. There is an important need for policy reforms converging ongoing as well as proposed programs (by national and international funding agencies) on tank rehabilitation; these can be planned in a phased manner by prioritizing the investment scenarios.
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spelling CGSpace1148382023-06-08T15:21:38Z Sustaining tank irrigation in South India through time-tested measures Kuppannan, Palanisami Thangavel, M. tank irrigation groundwater aquifers rainfall patterns wells soil types agroecosystems sustainability The century old irrigation tanks mostly found in south India account for about 1/3 of rice irrigated areas and largely benefit the small and marginal farmers. The current performance of these tanks is below the 50 percent level. Major factors contributing to their declining performance are: erratic rainfall pattern and reduced inflows (hydrology side); poor management of the tanks (tank side); ineffective water control & poor groundwater development (farmers’ side). Given the future impacts of climate change on water resources, sustaining tank irrigation is considered important. Evidence shows that developing an interface between tank ecosystems and wells is expected to augment water supplies, improve tank management and boost tank irrigation. This paper outlines a five-pronged strategy to achieve this: a) partial rehabilitation (partial desilting); b) full scale tank rehabilitation; c) converting tanks into percolation ponds; d) converting non-system tanks into system tanks; e) full scale groundwater development (tapping the full groundwater potential). Financial viability of the strategy also varies according to the scale and size of the investments and the expected benefits. There is an important need for policy reforms converging ongoing as well as proposed programs (by national and international funding agencies) on tank rehabilitation; these can be planned in a phased manner by prioritizing the investment scenarios. 2021-01-01 2021-08-31T22:45:53Z 2021-08-31T22:45:53Z Book Chapter https://hdl.handle.net/10568/114838 en Limited Access Kuppannan, Palanisami; Thangavel, M. 2021. Sustaining tank irrigation in South India through time-tested measures. In Fujita, K.; Mizushima, T. (Eds.). Sustainable development in India: groundwater irrigation, energy use, and food production. Oxon, UK: Routledge. pp.88-108. (Routledge New Horizons in South Asian Studies)
spellingShingle tank irrigation
groundwater
aquifers
rainfall patterns
wells
soil types
agroecosystems
sustainability
Kuppannan, Palanisami
Thangavel, M.
Sustaining tank irrigation in South India through time-tested measures
title Sustaining tank irrigation in South India through time-tested measures
title_full Sustaining tank irrigation in South India through time-tested measures
title_fullStr Sustaining tank irrigation in South India through time-tested measures
title_full_unstemmed Sustaining tank irrigation in South India through time-tested measures
title_short Sustaining tank irrigation in South India through time-tested measures
title_sort sustaining tank irrigation in south india through time tested measures
topic tank irrigation
groundwater
aquifers
rainfall patterns
wells
soil types
agroecosystems
sustainability
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/114838
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