Policy and institutional study on the strategic role of water storage in Bangladesh

This policy and institutional study was conducted as part of the Built Water Storage in South Asia (BWSSA) project (2023–2026), implemented by the International Water Management Institute (IWMI) and the Global Water Partnership (GWP). The BWSSA initiative aimed to transform how water storage—both bu...

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Main Authors: de Silva, Sanjiv, Jirasinha, Radheeka, Mondal, M. S., McCartney, Matthew P.
Format: Informe técnico
Language:Inglés
Published: International Water Management Institute 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/175307
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author de Silva, Sanjiv
Jirasinha, Radheeka
Mondal, M. S.
McCartney, Matthew P.
author_browse Jirasinha, Radheeka
McCartney, Matthew P.
Mondal, M. S.
de Silva, Sanjiv
author_facet de Silva, Sanjiv
Jirasinha, Radheeka
Mondal, M. S.
McCartney, Matthew P.
author_sort de Silva, Sanjiv
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description This policy and institutional study was conducted as part of the Built Water Storage in South Asia (BWSSA) project (2023–2026), implemented by the International Water Management Institute (IWMI) and the Global Water Partnership (GWP). The BWSSA initiative aimed to transform how water storage—both built (gray) and natural (green) infrastructure—was perceived, planned, and managed across five countries: Nepal, India, Bhutan, Bangladesh, and Pakistan. The project sought to strengthen national capacity for integrated storage planning, promote data-informed decision-making, support regional dialogue, and address inequities in access and benefit-sharing related to water storage. The policy and institutional study, conducted in each country, focused on six core questions: the types and roles of water storage across geographies and sectors; current and planned investments; the institutional and decision-making landscape; the alignment of sectoral storage plans with integrated water resources management (IWRM); opportunities for inclusive planning; and key knowledge gaps. It involved a three-phase process: (1) a review of national policy and strategy documents; (2) key informant interviews with stakeholders from government, civil society, academia, and the private sector; and (3) validation of findings through consultations. This iterative, participatory process helped surface implementation challenges, build credibility, and foster alignment among actors. In Bangladesh, agriculture—particularly irrigation—has driven economic growth and poverty reduction, accounting for nearly 90% of freshwater withdrawals. Yet, this sectoral dependence, combined with Bangladesh’s flat, flood- and salinity-prone deltaic landscape and extreme seasonal variability, exacerbates freshwater scarcity during the dry season. Bangladesh’s downstream position on 57 transboundary rivers, most of which originate in India, limits its control over water availability and heightens its reliance on transboundary cooperation. Storage infrastructure in Bangladesh remains highly localized and fragmented. The absence of large-scale surface reservoirs—due to topographic limitations and concerns over the social and environmental impacts of large infrastructure—has led to widespread groundwater reliance. Groundwater over-extraction is now stressing aquifers, compounded by salinity intrusion and arsenic contamination. The study identified managed aquifer recharge (MAR) as a promising strategy to harvest wet-season floodwaters and replenish depleted aquifers. However, technical capacity gaps, risks of aquifer pollution, and the absence of standardized guidelines currently hinder scaling of MAR beyond pilot initiatives. Critically, water storage in Bangladesh remains a secondary strategy—conditioned by efforts to increase dry-season river flows through improved transboundary water governance. With 54 transboundary rivers flowing in from India, bilateral negotiations are vital. However, progress has been slow due to persistent power asymmetries and India’s preference for case-by-case negotiation. A major window of opportunity lies in the scheduled renegotiation of the 1996 Ganges Water Sharing Treaty in 2026. The outcome of these talks could significantly influence Bangladesh’s long-term storage strategy, particularly in securing reliable dry-season flows. Ultimately, the study underscores the need for integrated, multi-level planning, regional cooperation, and targeted investment in both green and gray storage solutions to enhance Bangladesh’s water security and climate resilience.
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spelling CGSpace1753072025-11-07T08:03:14Z Policy and institutional study on the strategic role of water storage in Bangladesh de Silva, Sanjiv Jirasinha, Radheeka Mondal, M. S. McCartney, Matthew P. water storage water policies institutions strategies water resources planning water management water governance This policy and institutional study was conducted as part of the Built Water Storage in South Asia (BWSSA) project (2023–2026), implemented by the International Water Management Institute (IWMI) and the Global Water Partnership (GWP). The BWSSA initiative aimed to transform how water storage—both built (gray) and natural (green) infrastructure—was perceived, planned, and managed across five countries: Nepal, India, Bhutan, Bangladesh, and Pakistan. The project sought to strengthen national capacity for integrated storage planning, promote data-informed decision-making, support regional dialogue, and address inequities in access and benefit-sharing related to water storage. The policy and institutional study, conducted in each country, focused on six core questions: the types and roles of water storage across geographies and sectors; current and planned investments; the institutional and decision-making landscape; the alignment of sectoral storage plans with integrated water resources management (IWRM); opportunities for inclusive planning; and key knowledge gaps. It involved a three-phase process: (1) a review of national policy and strategy documents; (2) key informant interviews with stakeholders from government, civil society, academia, and the private sector; and (3) validation of findings through consultations. This iterative, participatory process helped surface implementation challenges, build credibility, and foster alignment among actors. In Bangladesh, agriculture—particularly irrigation—has driven economic growth and poverty reduction, accounting for nearly 90% of freshwater withdrawals. Yet, this sectoral dependence, combined with Bangladesh’s flat, flood- and salinity-prone deltaic landscape and extreme seasonal variability, exacerbates freshwater scarcity during the dry season. Bangladesh’s downstream position on 57 transboundary rivers, most of which originate in India, limits its control over water availability and heightens its reliance on transboundary cooperation. Storage infrastructure in Bangladesh remains highly localized and fragmented. The absence of large-scale surface reservoirs—due to topographic limitations and concerns over the social and environmental impacts of large infrastructure—has led to widespread groundwater reliance. Groundwater over-extraction is now stressing aquifers, compounded by salinity intrusion and arsenic contamination. The study identified managed aquifer recharge (MAR) as a promising strategy to harvest wet-season floodwaters and replenish depleted aquifers. However, technical capacity gaps, risks of aquifer pollution, and the absence of standardized guidelines currently hinder scaling of MAR beyond pilot initiatives. Critically, water storage in Bangladesh remains a secondary strategy—conditioned by efforts to increase dry-season river flows through improved transboundary water governance. With 54 transboundary rivers flowing in from India, bilateral negotiations are vital. However, progress has been slow due to persistent power asymmetries and India’s preference for case-by-case negotiation. A major window of opportunity lies in the scheduled renegotiation of the 1996 Ganges Water Sharing Treaty in 2026. The outcome of these talks could significantly influence Bangladesh’s long-term storage strategy, particularly in securing reliable dry-season flows. Ultimately, the study underscores the need for integrated, multi-level planning, regional cooperation, and targeted investment in both green and gray storage solutions to enhance Bangladesh’s water security and climate resilience. 2024-12-31 2025-06-25T11:09:38Z 2025-06-25T11:09:38Z Report https://hdl.handle.net/10568/175307 en Open Access application/pdf International Water Management Institute de Silva, Sanjiv; Jirasinha, Radheeka; Mondal, M. S.; McCartney, Matthew. 2024. Policy and institutional study on the strategic role of water storage in Bangladesh. Colombo, Sri Lanka: International Water Management Institute (IWMI). 40p. [doi: https://doi.org/10.5337/2025.206]
spellingShingle water storage
water policies
institutions
strategies
water resources
planning
water management
water governance
de Silva, Sanjiv
Jirasinha, Radheeka
Mondal, M. S.
McCartney, Matthew P.
Policy and institutional study on the strategic role of water storage in Bangladesh
title Policy and institutional study on the strategic role of water storage in Bangladesh
title_full Policy and institutional study on the strategic role of water storage in Bangladesh
title_fullStr Policy and institutional study on the strategic role of water storage in Bangladesh
title_full_unstemmed Policy and institutional study on the strategic role of water storage in Bangladesh
title_short Policy and institutional study on the strategic role of water storage in Bangladesh
title_sort policy and institutional study on the strategic role of water storage in bangladesh
topic water storage
water policies
institutions
strategies
water resources
planning
water management
water governance
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/175307
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