Irrigation water productivity as affected by water management in a small-scale irrigation scheme in the Blue Nile basin, Ethiopia

In Ethiopia, irrigation is mainly implemented in small-scale irrigation schemes, which are often characterized by low water productivity. This study reports on the efficiency and productivity of a typical small-scale irrigation scheme in the highlands of the Blue Nile, Ethiopia. Canal water flows an...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Demeku, S., Descheemaeker, Katrien K., Haileslassie, Amare, Amede, Tilahun
Format: Journal Article
Language:Inglés
Published: Cambridge University Press 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/3047
_version_ 1855514167323131904
author Demeku, S.
Descheemaeker, Katrien K.
Haileslassie, Amare
Amede, Tilahun
author_browse Amede, Tilahun
Demeku, S.
Descheemaeker, Katrien K.
Haileslassie, Amare
author_facet Demeku, S.
Descheemaeker, Katrien K.
Haileslassie, Amare
Amede, Tilahun
author_sort Demeku, S.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description In Ethiopia, irrigation is mainly implemented in small-scale irrigation schemes, which are often characterized by low water productivity. This study reports on the efficiency and productivity of a typical small-scale irrigation scheme in the highlands of the Blue Nile, Ethiopia. Canal water flows and the volume of irrigation water applied were measured at field level. Grain and crop residue biomass and grass biomass production along the canals were also measured. To triangulate the measurements, the irrigation farm management, effects of water logging around irrigation canals, farm water distribution mechanisms, effects of night irrigation and water losses due to soil cracking created by prolonged irrigation were closely observed. The average canal water loss from the main, the secondary and the field canals was 2.58, 1.59 and 0.39 l s−1 100 m−1, representing 4.5, 4.0 and 26% of the total water flow respectively. About 0.05% of the loss was attributed to grass production for livestock, while the rest was lost through evaporation and canal seepage. Grass production for livestock feed had a land productivity of 6190.5 kg ha−1 and a water productivity of 0.82 kg m−3 . Land productivity for straw and grain was 2048 and 770 kg ha−1, respectively, for teff, and 1864 kg ha−1 and 758 kg ha−1, respectively, for wheat. Water productivities of the crops varied from 0.2 to 1.63 kg m−3. A significant volume of water was lost from small-scale irrigation systems mainly because farmers’ water application did not match crop needs. The high price incurred by pumped irrigation positively affected water management by minimizing water losses and forced farmers to use deficit irrigation. Improving water productivity of small-scale irrigation requires integrated interventions including night storage mechanisms, optimal irrigation scheduling, empowerment of farmers to maintain canals and proper irrigation schedules.
format Journal Article
id CGSpace3047
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2011
publishDateRange 2011
publishDateSort 2011
publisher Cambridge University Press
publisherStr Cambridge University Press
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace30472024-11-15T08:52:05Z Irrigation water productivity as affected by water management in a small-scale irrigation scheme in the Blue Nile basin, Ethiopia Demeku, S. Descheemaeker, Katrien K. Haileslassie, Amare Amede, Tilahun irrigation water In Ethiopia, irrigation is mainly implemented in small-scale irrigation schemes, which are often characterized by low water productivity. This study reports on the efficiency and productivity of a typical small-scale irrigation scheme in the highlands of the Blue Nile, Ethiopia. Canal water flows and the volume of irrigation water applied were measured at field level. Grain and crop residue biomass and grass biomass production along the canals were also measured. To triangulate the measurements, the irrigation farm management, effects of water logging around irrigation canals, farm water distribution mechanisms, effects of night irrigation and water losses due to soil cracking created by prolonged irrigation were closely observed. The average canal water loss from the main, the secondary and the field canals was 2.58, 1.59 and 0.39 l s−1 100 m−1, representing 4.5, 4.0 and 26% of the total water flow respectively. About 0.05% of the loss was attributed to grass production for livestock, while the rest was lost through evaporation and canal seepage. Grass production for livestock feed had a land productivity of 6190.5 kg ha−1 and a water productivity of 0.82 kg m−3 . Land productivity for straw and grain was 2048 and 770 kg ha−1, respectively, for teff, and 1864 kg ha−1 and 758 kg ha−1, respectively, for wheat. Water productivities of the crops varied from 0.2 to 1.63 kg m−3. A significant volume of water was lost from small-scale irrigation systems mainly because farmers’ water application did not match crop needs. The high price incurred by pumped irrigation positively affected water management by minimizing water losses and forced farmers to use deficit irrigation. Improving water productivity of small-scale irrigation requires integrated interventions including night storage mechanisms, optimal irrigation scheduling, empowerment of farmers to maintain canals and proper irrigation schedules. 2011-01 2011-01-15T10:02:28Z 2011-01-15T10:02:28Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/3047 en Limited Access Cambridge University Press Demeku, S., Descheemaeker, K., Haileslassie, A. and Amede, T. 2011. Irrigation water productivity as affected by water management in a small-scale irrigation scheme in the Blue Nile basin, Ethiopia. Experimental Agriculture 47(S1): 39-55.
spellingShingle irrigation
water
Demeku, S.
Descheemaeker, Katrien K.
Haileslassie, Amare
Amede, Tilahun
Irrigation water productivity as affected by water management in a small-scale irrigation scheme in the Blue Nile basin, Ethiopia
title Irrigation water productivity as affected by water management in a small-scale irrigation scheme in the Blue Nile basin, Ethiopia
title_full Irrigation water productivity as affected by water management in a small-scale irrigation scheme in the Blue Nile basin, Ethiopia
title_fullStr Irrigation water productivity as affected by water management in a small-scale irrigation scheme in the Blue Nile basin, Ethiopia
title_full_unstemmed Irrigation water productivity as affected by water management in a small-scale irrigation scheme in the Blue Nile basin, Ethiopia
title_short Irrigation water productivity as affected by water management in a small-scale irrigation scheme in the Blue Nile basin, Ethiopia
title_sort irrigation water productivity as affected by water management in a small scale irrigation scheme in the blue nile basin ethiopia
topic irrigation
water
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/3047
work_keys_str_mv AT demekus irrigationwaterproductivityasaffectedbywatermanagementinasmallscaleirrigationschemeinthebluenilebasinethiopia
AT descheemaekerkatrienk irrigationwaterproductivityasaffectedbywatermanagementinasmallscaleirrigationschemeinthebluenilebasinethiopia
AT haileslassieamare irrigationwaterproductivityasaffectedbywatermanagementinasmallscaleirrigationschemeinthebluenilebasinethiopia
AT amedetilahun irrigationwaterproductivityasaffectedbywatermanagementinasmallscaleirrigationschemeinthebluenilebasinethiopia