Cock Eyed View of Tank Irrigation - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Cock Eyed View of Tank Irrigation

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Encroachment of Supply Channels. Encroachment of Tank Bed. Deterioration of Tank Bund ... the tank bed area by 3 feet _at_ Rs.50 per tractor load(2.5cu.m. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Cock Eyed View of Tank Irrigation


1
Cock Eyed View of Tank Irrigation
  • Results from a Study of Five Tanks in Anathpur
    District,
  • Andhra Pradesh

2
Brief Profile of the Tanks Studied
This tank provides water to four villages.
However I studied one village which has 70 of
the Ayacut land. (BorewellsOpenwells)
3
Key Physical/Structural Problems Associated With
Tanks
  • Catchment Cultivation
  • Silting of Tank Bed
  • Encroachment of Supply Channels
  • Encroachment of Tank Bed
  • Deterioration of Tank Bund
  • Leaking Sluices

4
Silting of Tank Bed
  • Silting of tank bed is a common problem in all
    the tanks.
  • Thummalakunta 7 Feet of Silting
  • Gollapalli- 6 to 7 Feet of Silting
  • Kethigani Cheruvu- 9 Feet of Silting
  • Khambalapalli- 8-9 Feet of Silting
  • The storage capacity of all the tanks has been
    reduced by half or more. If everything else was
    as before one would expect in such a case that
    the tanks would be overflowing. In actual, the
    past 20 years (the period coinciding with a
    massive rise in siltation) has also seen most
    tanks drying up.

5
Silting of Tank Bed.
  • There can be two explanations for this
    phenomenon-
  • Either the overall rainfall has reduced
    dramatically
  • Adequate runoff is not being generated due to
    other reasons.

6
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7
Silting of Tank Bed.
  • While the cost of desiltation is high the
    benefits can be varied.
  • The cost per acre of ayacut in case of
    Thumulkunta comes to as high as Rs. 40-50
    thousand per acre. This is half the actual value
    of land in the head reaches of the tank and equal
    to the value of the land in the tail reaches.
  • Most programs allocate a small proportion of
    their rehabilitation budget for desilting. The
    rate of siltation is so high that all the
    capacity increase will be negated in a few year.
    This is because in the absence of a targeted
    program for desiltation the villagers have no
    capacity to remove the volume of silt coming in
    every year. Also the quality of the silt is not
    good.
  • Cost is of desilting the tank bed area by 3 feet
    _at_ Rs.50 per tractor load(2.5cu.m.)

8
Catchment Encroachment
  • The catchment in all except one of the study
    tanks was almost completely cultivated.
  • Cultivation of the catchment results in
  • Heavy siltation of the tank bed.
  • Holding precipitation which contributes in the
    tanks not filling up. In combination with
    groundwater overexploitation the combination is
    fatal for tanks.
  • Removing encroachment or reducing them is crucial
    if any of the other measures of rehabilitation
    are going to have any effect.

9
Two Questions on Catchment
  • WHO OWNS LAND IN THE CATCHMENT?
  • WHAT IS THE ECONOMIC STATUS OF THE PEOPLE IN THE
    CATCHMENT?

10
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11
Summarizing the Argument
  • Two big ticket items of any rehabilitation
    strategy are impossible to work
  • Catchment encroachment cannot be removed because
    the same people who own land in the command own
    land in the catchment. Also these lands are in
    most cases legal government pattas and would be
    impossible to take back.
  • Desilting is prohibitively costly. In addition it
    is not much use in many tanks which do not fill
    up inspite of the heavy siltation. The villagers
    also do not have the economic capacity to desilt
    regularly which means that the tank will keep
    silting up after completion of desilting
    exercise.

12
Cockeyed View of Tank Management
  • Alternative views have been taken as to how best
    can the tanks be managed in the modern context
  • Convert the tanks into percolation ponds. This
    has worked in states like Rajasthan and Gujarat
    and might work in South India.
  • Promote fisheries as the prominent use of the
    tanks. The fishing contractor has the maximum
    incentive to maximize the Gross Tank Product.
  • Link tanks to canals
  • I will argue that these approaches do not work in
    the tanks I have studied and I then raise an
    alternative hypothesis as to how best to manage
    the tanks.

13
Groundwater Hydrology in Hard Rock Areas
Clusters here would yield good water
Tubewells will yield water anywhere but the yield
would be low as no obvious fracture zone present
14
Spatial Distribution of Tubewells in
Thummallakunta
15
Spatial Distribution of Tubewells in Kethigani
Cheruvu
16
Cropping Pattern of Tubewell Owners
Water Selling at Per Hour Rate
Minimum Water Selling
Water Selling Rampant
17
Cropping Pattern of Water Buyers
18
STRENGTH OF WATER MARKET
19
FISHERIES LED TANK REHABILTATION
20
Problems With Fisheries Led Revival
  • I found a host of issues with a fishing led
    revival strategy
  • There are only 3 tanks in which regular fishing
    contracts are given. Out of these three there is
    only one tank in which the contract is given out
    every year. In the other 2 the contracts are once
    every 2-3 years.
  • The person taking the fishing contract simply did
    not have the muscle to challenge the Ayacut
    farmers. There was no doubt that the tanks are
    the exclusive property of the Ayacutdaars and
    fishing is taken as only an incidental use of the
    stored water and not a primary use.

21
Problems With Fisheries Led Revival.
  • The economic returns from fisheries in a small
    tank are very low. A typical analysis of cost and
    returns from fisheries for a small tank are as
    follows

22
What Then Is The Alternative?
23
An Alternative View
  • The solutions to management of tanks are
    essentially based on conflicts between different
    stakeholders. Giving control of tank management
    to one group of stakeholders (well owners in the
    case of percolation and fishing contractors in a
    fishing led revival) creates disadvantages for
    the other stakeholders which are numerous.
  • The tanks as the exist today lead to highly
    inefficient use of the available precipitation in
    the area. By storing massive quantities of water
    they promote islands of water intensive crops
    like sugarcane and paddy in a region which
    receives rainfall similar to what is received in
    large parts of Rajasthan.
  • Land holding pattern in the tanks are also
    unfavorably disposed towards the poorest families
    in the village. So reviving tanks would result in
    widening the income gap between the farmers.

24
Advantages of a Catchment Led Revival Strategy
25
Impact of Watershed Project on Rainfed Yields
26
Limitations
  • I put forward the idea that a catchment led
    rehabilitation is the best way to manage tanks
    only as a hypothesis for the following reasons
  • Only 5 tanks have been studied. There are 300
    tanks in Hindupur Taluk alone.
  • Tanks in the Rayelseema region are totally
    different from those in costal AP or Tamil Nadu.
    In these areas tanks fill up regularly and much
    of their catchment is under forest cover. The
    strategies in these areas could be totally
    different from the ones promoted here.

27
  • THANK YOU

28
TUBEWELL DETAILS
29
Problems With Fisheries Led Revival.
  • The economic return from fisheries is just not
    enough to influence the contractor to go for a
    desilting exercise- the key issue in a well
    performing tank.
  • He also has minimal interest in selling any water
    to the tail end farmers because the cost of
    transporting water to the far away areas would be
    prohibitively high (the distances can be 1-2 kms.
    away from the tank bund).
  • For the contractor the best interest would be to
    ignore any water supply to the head reach farmers
    as well. These farmers are forced to grow paddy
    once water fills in the tank. Supplying water for
    paddy in the seepage area (which can be as much
    as half or more of the total command area) would
    be detrimental to the fishing contractors
    interest as he would get reduced yields.
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