Impacts of lining, maintenance and operations on water delivery performance in Pakistan

A comparative study of hydraulic performance of three secondary canals in Pakistan's Punjab was undertaken to determine the relative benefits of three physical interventions: (1) focusing standard maintenance inputs using a computer-based model to analyze the effects of work in specific locations in...

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Autores principales: Murray-Rust, Hammond, Vander Velde, E.J., Merrey, Douglas J.
Formato: Conference Paper
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: 1993
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/38590
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author Murray-Rust, Hammond
Vander Velde, E.J.
Merrey, Douglas J.
author_browse Merrey, Douglas J.
Murray-Rust, Hammond
Vander Velde, E.J.
author_facet Murray-Rust, Hammond
Vander Velde, E.J.
Merrey, Douglas J.
author_sort Murray-Rust, Hammond
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description A comparative study of hydraulic performance of three secondary canals in Pakistan's Punjab was undertaken to determine the relative benefits of three physical interventions: (1) focusing standard maintenance inputs using a computer-based model to analyze the effects of work in specific locations in a small distributary, (2) major desilting involving mechanical excavation of sediment in a medium sized canal, and (3) lining of the lower two-thirds of a major distributary. The results indicate that the greatest improvement in hydraulic performance was obtained from the least expensive intervention, focused maintenance: for a capital cost of $0.52 per ha, the inequity ratio between the head quarter and tail quarter of the canal declined from 4.2 to 1.3. For mechanical desilting the investment was $2.54 per ha, resulting in a reduction in inequity from 6.1 to 2.6. The benefits from this intervention would need to last at least 15 years to be economically competitive with focused maintenance inputs. Lining proved to be unjustified in the study location: although the investment for lining was $37.73 per ha, performance improvements after an earlier desilting were not sustained and tail end water conditions deteriorated following lining. Data also reveal that operational rigor maintaining adequate discharge, implementing rotations and taking actions against water thieves is essential if the benefits following physical intervention are to be maintained.
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spelling CGSpace385902023-02-15T12:05:01Z Impacts of lining, maintenance and operations on water delivery performance in Pakistan Murray-Rust, Hammond Vander Velde, E.J. Merrey, Douglas J. water delivery canal linings maintenance irrigation operation irrigation canals A comparative study of hydraulic performance of three secondary canals in Pakistan's Punjab was undertaken to determine the relative benefits of three physical interventions: (1) focusing standard maintenance inputs using a computer-based model to analyze the effects of work in specific locations in a small distributary, (2) major desilting involving mechanical excavation of sediment in a medium sized canal, and (3) lining of the lower two-thirds of a major distributary. The results indicate that the greatest improvement in hydraulic performance was obtained from the least expensive intervention, focused maintenance: for a capital cost of $0.52 per ha, the inequity ratio between the head quarter and tail quarter of the canal declined from 4.2 to 1.3. For mechanical desilting the investment was $2.54 per ha, resulting in a reduction in inequity from 6.1 to 2.6. The benefits from this intervention would need to last at least 15 years to be economically competitive with focused maintenance inputs. Lining proved to be unjustified in the study location: although the investment for lining was $37.73 per ha, performance improvements after an earlier desilting were not sustained and tail end water conditions deteriorated following lining. Data also reveal that operational rigor maintaining adequate discharge, implementing rotations and taking actions against water thieves is essential if the benefits following physical intervention are to be maintained. 1993 2014-06-13T11:42:28Z 2014-06-13T11:42:28Z Conference Paper https://hdl.handle.net/10568/38590 en Limited Access Murray-Rust, D. H.; Vander Velde, E. J.; Merrey, D. J. 1993. Impacts of lining, maintenance and operations on water delivery performance in Pakistan. In HR Wallingford. Maintenance and operation of irrigation/drainage schemes for improved performance: papers presented to the Asian Regional Symposium held in Beijing, People's Republic of China, 24-27 May 1993. Wallingford, Oxfordshire, UK: HR Wallingford. pp.6:63-75.
spellingShingle water delivery
canal linings
maintenance
irrigation operation
irrigation canals
Murray-Rust, Hammond
Vander Velde, E.J.
Merrey, Douglas J.
Impacts of lining, maintenance and operations on water delivery performance in Pakistan
title Impacts of lining, maintenance and operations on water delivery performance in Pakistan
title_full Impacts of lining, maintenance and operations on water delivery performance in Pakistan
title_fullStr Impacts of lining, maintenance and operations on water delivery performance in Pakistan
title_full_unstemmed Impacts of lining, maintenance and operations on water delivery performance in Pakistan
title_short Impacts of lining, maintenance and operations on water delivery performance in Pakistan
title_sort impacts of lining maintenance and operations on water delivery performance in pakistan
topic water delivery
canal linings
maintenance
irrigation operation
irrigation canals
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/38590
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