Small private irrigation: a thriving but overlooked sector

An increasing number of smallholder farmers engage in irrigation using their own resources. They buy or rent irrigation equipment and draw water from nearby sources without depending on or without interference from public agencies or water user associations. The individualization of Agricultural Wat...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Fraiture, Charlotte de, Giordano, Meredith A.
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Elsevier 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/40238
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author Fraiture, Charlotte de
Giordano, Meredith A.
author_browse Fraiture, Charlotte de
Giordano, Meredith A.
author_facet Fraiture, Charlotte de
Giordano, Meredith A.
author_sort Fraiture, Charlotte de
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description An increasing number of smallholder farmers engage in irrigation using their own resources. They buy or rent irrigation equipment and draw water from nearby sources without depending on or without interference from public agencies or water user associations. The individualization of Agricultural Water Management has been ongoing for several decades in South Asia where most irrigation now takes place from privately owned wells. Recently, small private irrigation is emerging also in sub Saharan Africa. It is farmer-driven, responds to a genuine demand from smallholders and has substantial potential for poverty alleviation and rural development. In many countries the area under privately managed and owned irrigation is larger than under public irrigation schemes. However, the individualization of irrigation and its spontaneous, unchecked spread pose challenges to equitable access to and sustainable management of water resources. Irrigation investments and research efforts have largely focused on the underperforming public irrigation sector, ignoring small private irrigation. This special issue describes and analyzes this thriving but overlooked sector, drawing from examples from five countries in Sub-Saharan Africa and two states in India. The authors explore ways to enhance the potential of small private irrigation for all, without jeopardizing the sustainability of the available water resources.
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spelling CGSpace402382025-06-17T08:23:29Z Small private irrigation: a thriving but overlooked sector Fraiture, Charlotte de Giordano, Meredith A. irrigation gender farmer-led irrigation smallholders farmers small scale systems water resources conflict technology costs investment income environmental effects An increasing number of smallholder farmers engage in irrigation using their own resources. They buy or rent irrigation equipment and draw water from nearby sources without depending on or without interference from public agencies or water user associations. The individualization of Agricultural Water Management has been ongoing for several decades in South Asia where most irrigation now takes place from privately owned wells. Recently, small private irrigation is emerging also in sub Saharan Africa. It is farmer-driven, responds to a genuine demand from smallholders and has substantial potential for poverty alleviation and rural development. In many countries the area under privately managed and owned irrigation is larger than under public irrigation schemes. However, the individualization of irrigation and its spontaneous, unchecked spread pose challenges to equitable access to and sustainable management of water resources. Irrigation investments and research efforts have largely focused on the underperforming public irrigation sector, ignoring small private irrigation. This special issue describes and analyzes this thriving but overlooked sector, drawing from examples from five countries in Sub-Saharan Africa and two states in India. The authors explore ways to enhance the potential of small private irrigation for all, without jeopardizing the sustainability of the available water resources. 2014-01 2014-06-13T14:47:14Z 2014-06-13T14:47:14Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/40238 en Limited Access Elsevier de Fraiture, C.; Giordano, Meredith. 2014. Small private irrigation: a thriving but overlooked sector. Agricultural Water Management, 131:167-174. doi: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.agwat.2013.07.005
spellingShingle irrigation
gender
farmer-led irrigation
smallholders
farmers
small scale systems
water resources
conflict
technology
costs
investment
income
environmental effects
Fraiture, Charlotte de
Giordano, Meredith A.
Small private irrigation: a thriving but overlooked sector
title Small private irrigation: a thriving but overlooked sector
title_full Small private irrigation: a thriving but overlooked sector
title_fullStr Small private irrigation: a thriving but overlooked sector
title_full_unstemmed Small private irrigation: a thriving but overlooked sector
title_short Small private irrigation: a thriving but overlooked sector
title_sort small private irrigation a thriving but overlooked sector
topic irrigation
gender
farmer-led irrigation
smallholders
farmers
small scale systems
water resources
conflict
technology
costs
investment
income
environmental effects
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/40238
work_keys_str_mv AT fraiturecharlottede smallprivateirrigationathrivingbutoverlookedsector
AT giordanomereditha smallprivateirrigationathrivingbutoverlookedsector