Solar irrigation pumps: can electricity buy-back curb groundwater over-use?

Groundwater pumping for irrigation has exploded across India since the 1970’s largely due to a proliferation of cheap pump sets and highly subsidized energy. In much of Western and peninsular India, aquifers have been overexploited with substantial decreases in water tables leading to even higher am...

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Autor principal: Franklin, Bradley
Formato: Conference Paper
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/75792
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author Franklin, Bradley
author_browse Franklin, Bradley
author_facet Franklin, Bradley
author_sort Franklin, Bradley
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Groundwater pumping for irrigation has exploded across India since the 1970’s largely due to a proliferation of cheap pump sets and highly subsidized energy. In much of Western and peninsular India, aquifers have been overexploited with substantial decreases in water tables leading to even higher amounts of energy used for pumping. As solar irrigation pumps become more effective and affordable, the prospect of uncontrolled solar pumping further exacerbating the unsustainable use of groundwater has led to calls by some for the government to buy back excess electricity generated on farms. Under such a scheme, the buy-back price would have to be high enough to make selling the power more profitable than using it for further irrigation, yet not as high as the price that is charged for electricity from the grid lest an opportunity for arbitrage be created. The correct value for the buy-back price will thus depend on the marginal profitability of water use on the farm with the possibility that the value of water to the farmer may be too high to make the scheme feasible. In this paper, estimates of water and electricity demand are derived for Punjab state and used to inform what an effective buyback scheme might entail. Results indicate that a buy-back price differentiated by season and location might be an affordable way to promote groundwater conservation.
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spelling CGSpace757922021-10-07T15:37:47Z Solar irrigation pumps: can electricity buy-back curb groundwater over-use? Franklin, Bradley solar energy groundwater pumps water use electricity costs pricing purchasing economic value irrigation water water demand energy demand farmers Groundwater pumping for irrigation has exploded across India since the 1970’s largely due to a proliferation of cheap pump sets and highly subsidized energy. In much of Western and peninsular India, aquifers have been overexploited with substantial decreases in water tables leading to even higher amounts of energy used for pumping. As solar irrigation pumps become more effective and affordable, the prospect of uncontrolled solar pumping further exacerbating the unsustainable use of groundwater has led to calls by some for the government to buy back excess electricity generated on farms. Under such a scheme, the buy-back price would have to be high enough to make selling the power more profitable than using it for further irrigation, yet not as high as the price that is charged for electricity from the grid lest an opportunity for arbitrage be created. The correct value for the buy-back price will thus depend on the marginal profitability of water use on the farm with the possibility that the value of water to the farmer may be too high to make the scheme feasible. In this paper, estimates of water and electricity demand are derived for Punjab state and used to inform what an effective buyback scheme might entail. Results indicate that a buy-back price differentiated by season and location might be an affordable way to promote groundwater conservation. 2015 2016-06-23T04:51:40Z 2016-06-23T04:51:40Z Conference Paper https://hdl.handle.net/10568/75792 en Open Access Franklin, Bradley. 2015. Solar irrigation pumps: can electricity buy-back curb groundwater over-use? Paper presented at the ICID 26th Euro-Mediterranean Regional Conference and Workshops on Innovate to Improve Irrigation Performances. Theme 3: What Governance for Groundwater and Surface Water Use in Agriculture?, Montpellier, France, 12-15 October 2015. 4p.
spellingShingle solar energy
groundwater
pumps
water use
electricity
costs
pricing
purchasing
economic value
irrigation water
water demand
energy demand
farmers
Franklin, Bradley
Solar irrigation pumps: can electricity buy-back curb groundwater over-use?
title Solar irrigation pumps: can electricity buy-back curb groundwater over-use?
title_full Solar irrigation pumps: can electricity buy-back curb groundwater over-use?
title_fullStr Solar irrigation pumps: can electricity buy-back curb groundwater over-use?
title_full_unstemmed Solar irrigation pumps: can electricity buy-back curb groundwater over-use?
title_short Solar irrigation pumps: can electricity buy-back curb groundwater over-use?
title_sort solar irrigation pumps can electricity buy back curb groundwater over use
topic solar energy
groundwater
pumps
water use
electricity
costs
pricing
purchasing
economic value
irrigation water
water demand
energy demand
farmers
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/75792
work_keys_str_mv AT franklinbradley solarirrigationpumpscanelectricitybuybackcurbgroundwateroveruse