Environmentally sustainable management of water demands under changing climate conditions in the Upper Ganges Basin, India

Allocation of water to cities, industries and agriculture has been a common practice in river basin planning and management. It is widely accepted that water also needs to be allocated for the aquatic environment, i.e. alongside the demands of other users. This paper describes the application of a b...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Sapkota, P., Bharati, L., Gurung P, Kaushal N, Smakhtin, Vladimir U.
Format: Journal Article
Language:Inglés
Published: Wiley 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/34920
_version_ 1855537086461902848
author Sapkota, P.
Bharati, L.
Gurung P
Kaushal N
Smakhtin, Vladimir U.
author_browse Bharati, L.
Gurung P
Kaushal N
Sapkota, P.
Smakhtin, Vladimir U.
author_facet Sapkota, P.
Bharati, L.
Gurung P
Kaushal N
Smakhtin, Vladimir U.
author_sort Sapkota, P.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Allocation of water to cities, industries and agriculture has been a common practice in river basin planning and management. It is widely accepted that water also needs to be allocated for the aquatic environment, i.e. alongside the demands of other users. This paper describes the application of a basin planning model (Water Evaluation and Planning Model) to assess present and alternative water management options, which include incorporation of environmental flows (EFs) in the Upper Ganges River, India. Furthermore, the impacts of projected climate changes are also considered. The paper also briefly summarizes the EF assessment methodology, which was conducted through a multidisciplinary, multi-stakeholder approach (Building Blocks methodology). This is the first time that a comprehensive EF assessment has been done in India. Results from this study show that annual water demands for the domestic, industrial and irrigation water use are 1375, 1029 and 6680 MCM, respectively. Unmet demands, i.e. when there is not enough water to fulfil the required demands, were a problem during December and January for the past climate and during December, January and February under climate change-projected conditions. Adding EFs increased unmet demands in the same winter months. During March–November, unmet water demands were less than 5 MCM even with the addition of EFs. Reducing crop type to less water intense crops was more effective in reducing unmet demands than decreasing the cropped area. Improving irrigation systems through improved efficiency and water saving technologies as well as conjunctive use of surface and ground water is also viable options. However, the most effective water management solution is from managing upstream storage structures such as the Tehri dam for increased dry season flows. Dry season releases from Tehri dam can be used to reduce the downstream unmet demands, which include EFs to less than 5 MCM/month.
format Journal Article
id CGSpace34920
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2013
publishDateRange 2013
publishDateSort 2013
publisher Wiley
publisherStr Wiley
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace349202025-02-19T13:42:45Z Environmentally sustainable management of water demands under changing climate conditions in the Upper Ganges Basin, India Sapkota, P. Bharati, L. Gurung P Kaushal N Smakhtin, Vladimir U. agriculture climate water management water demand water use groundwater climate change river basins environmental flows catchment areas models case studies crop production Allocation of water to cities, industries and agriculture has been a common practice in river basin planning and management. It is widely accepted that water also needs to be allocated for the aquatic environment, i.e. alongside the demands of other users. This paper describes the application of a basin planning model (Water Evaluation and Planning Model) to assess present and alternative water management options, which include incorporation of environmental flows (EFs) in the Upper Ganges River, India. Furthermore, the impacts of projected climate changes are also considered. The paper also briefly summarizes the EF assessment methodology, which was conducted through a multidisciplinary, multi-stakeholder approach (Building Blocks methodology). This is the first time that a comprehensive EF assessment has been done in India. Results from this study show that annual water demands for the domestic, industrial and irrigation water use are 1375, 1029 and 6680 MCM, respectively. Unmet demands, i.e. when there is not enough water to fulfil the required demands, were a problem during December and January for the past climate and during December, January and February under climate change-projected conditions. Adding EFs increased unmet demands in the same winter months. During March–November, unmet water demands were less than 5 MCM even with the addition of EFs. Reducing crop type to less water intense crops was more effective in reducing unmet demands than decreasing the cropped area. Improving irrigation systems through improved efficiency and water saving technologies as well as conjunctive use of surface and ground water is also viable options. However, the most effective water management solution is from managing upstream storage structures such as the Tehri dam for increased dry season flows. Dry season releases from Tehri dam can be used to reduce the downstream unmet demands, which include EFs to less than 5 MCM/month. 2013-07-15 2014-02-19T07:59:19Z 2014-02-19T07:59:19Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/34920 en Limited Access Wiley Sapkota P, Bharati L, Gurung P, Kaushal N, Smakhtin V. 2013. Environmentally sustainable management of water demands under changing climate conditions in the Upper Ganges Basin, India. Hydrological Processes 27 (15): 2197–2208. doi: https://doi.org/10.1002/hyp.9852
spellingShingle agriculture
climate
water management
water demand
water use
groundwater
climate change
river basins
environmental flows
catchment areas
models
case studies
crop production
Sapkota, P.
Bharati, L.
Gurung P
Kaushal N
Smakhtin, Vladimir U.
Environmentally sustainable management of water demands under changing climate conditions in the Upper Ganges Basin, India
title Environmentally sustainable management of water demands under changing climate conditions in the Upper Ganges Basin, India
title_full Environmentally sustainable management of water demands under changing climate conditions in the Upper Ganges Basin, India
title_fullStr Environmentally sustainable management of water demands under changing climate conditions in the Upper Ganges Basin, India
title_full_unstemmed Environmentally sustainable management of water demands under changing climate conditions in the Upper Ganges Basin, India
title_short Environmentally sustainable management of water demands under changing climate conditions in the Upper Ganges Basin, India
title_sort environmentally sustainable management of water demands under changing climate conditions in the upper ganges basin india
topic agriculture
climate
water management
water demand
water use
groundwater
climate change
river basins
environmental flows
catchment areas
models
case studies
crop production
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/34920
work_keys_str_mv AT sapkotap environmentallysustainablemanagementofwaterdemandsunderchangingclimateconditionsintheuppergangesbasinindia
AT bharatil environmentallysustainablemanagementofwaterdemandsunderchangingclimateconditionsintheuppergangesbasinindia
AT gurungp environmentallysustainablemanagementofwaterdemandsunderchangingclimateconditionsintheuppergangesbasinindia
AT kaushaln environmentallysustainablemanagementofwaterdemandsunderchangingclimateconditionsintheuppergangesbasinindia
AT smakhtinvladimiru environmentallysustainablemanagementofwaterdemandsunderchangingclimateconditionsintheuppergangesbasinindia