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IWMI

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94% of the RBC crop land are irrigated. Groundwater is the dominant source ... Present cropping intensity is high as 165% in the right command area due to ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: IWMI


1
Benefits and Cost of Irrigation Water
TransfersA case study of Polavaram
  • IWMI
  • Anik Bhaduri, Upali Amarasinghe, Tushaar Shah, BK
    Anand

2
Objectives - Irrigation cost/benefit assessment
  • Main objective
  • Assess direct/indirect irrigation benefits and
    costs of the Polavaram project
  • Specifically, net benefits due to irrigation
    water transfers on
  • Crop production
  • Livestock
  • Fisheries
  • Forward linkages (agro based industries,
    transporation, storage etc.)
  • Backward linkages (Farm equipment s, agriculture
    inputs supplies, Equipment maintenance etc. )

3
Outline - Presentation
  • What Polavaram irrigation proposes?
  • Present status of irrigation in RBC (en-route
    link) and LBC
  • Emerging cropping patterns and irrigation
  • Net benefits of irrigation source wise
  • Cost/benefits of the irrigation water transfers

4
Does irrigation benefits exceed the cost? It
does, but under different circumstances
5
What Polavaram proposes?
6
What Polavaram proposes?
Transfer or use 287 tmc of water
7
Cost/benefit methodology
  • Conceptual and empirical Domain of the analysis
  • Assess benefits of irrigation in LBC RBC
  • Valuation of ex-ante benefit analysis - Reference
    condition
  • Area that could be like Polavaram command after
    irrigation water transfers
  • Net value added per ha or m3 of after water
    transfers
  • Requires the differences irrigated and rainfed
    crop yields, input application, other cost of
    production, land rent etc.

8
Cost/benefit methodology
  • Sample of 1000 farmers
  • 37 mandals, 50 villages
  • 521 farmers in the RBC, 479 farmers in the LBC

9
Current status of irrigation
  • 94 of the RBC crop land are irrigated
  • Groundwater is the dominant source
  • 80 of the LBC crop lands are irrigated
  • Groundwater is the dominant source

10
Current status of irrigation
11
Current status of irrigation
12
Current status of irrigation
13
(No Transcript)
14
Current status of irrigation
15
Current status of irrigation
  • Net value is high in areas with GW water depth
    75-100m
  • They have high capacity pumps, and diversified
    cropping patterns

16
Polavaram project irrigation
17
Benefits and costs
18
Benefits and Cost
19
Benefits and Cost analysis - Assumptions
  • Assumptions-
  • Life of the Project-100yrs
  • Depreciation rate 1 per year
  • Rate of Interest 8
  • Period of Construction-15 yrs
  • Rehabilitation Cost-None
  • Ignores the positive externalities of groundwater
  • Recharge and negative externalities of water
    logging and salinity.

20
Cost of supplying irrigation
21
Benefit cost ratio and IRR
22
Livestock benefits
23
Livestock benefits
24
Salient Observation and Policy Implications
  • Much of cultivated area in the proposed command
    area is already irrigated, and particularly in
    the right canal command area.
  • Ground water is the most dominating form of
    irrigation in the command area.
  • Farmers are using groundwater to grow high valued
    annual crops.
  • Present cropping intensity is high as 165 in the
    right command area due to extensive cultivation
    of annual crops using groundwater irrigation

25
Salient Observation and Policy Implications
  • Higher benefits if the farmers continue to grow
    annual crops and benefit cost ratio will be more
    favorable for the implementation of the project.
  • Polavaram Dam may also be useful in GW
    sustainability where much of the groundwater
    resource is used to grow high valued annual crops
    , particularly in the rabi season.
  • Livestock benefits will be substantial if the
    farmers retain their livestock even after the
    introduction of surface water or with a reduction
    in fodder cost.
  • Livestock can increase the overall benefits of
    the Polavaram dam by 8 to 32 depending upon
    different scenarios.
  • The gains will be maximum if the farmers grow
    maize for livestock feed in the rabi season and
    retain their livestock.

26
  • Thank you
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