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Irrigation Sector Reform in Asia:

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Irrigation Sector Reform in Asia: From Patronage with Participation' to ... Structure of patronage with participation was entrenched by: ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Irrigation Sector Reform in Asia:


1
Irrigation Sector Reform in Asia
  • From Patronage with Participation to
  • Partnership with Empowerment

2
3 Phases of Irrigation Development
  • Expansion (1950-1982)
  • Improvement (1982-present)
  • Restructuring (1986-present)

3
Expansion Phase
  • 1970s - 10-15 billion USD/yr
  • One-third of development budget
  • From 100 to 255 M ha (1950-1995)
  • 1970-82 2/yr
  • 1990s - lt 1/yr

4
Improvement Phase
  • Rehabilitation upgrading
  • Training
  • New technologies
  • New management tools
  • Water users associations
  • Irrigation service fees

5
Expansion phase produced
  • Sectorized government as engine of development
    owner of water resources
  • Large bureaucracies
  • Dependence on foreign loans
  • Farmers as beneficiaries and supplicants
  • Construction bias
  • Patronage with participation

6
Improvement phase
  • Structure of patronage with participation was
    entrenched by
  • Accepting the structure building capacity
  • Augmenting the structure with farmer
    participation at low levels
  • Result a malignant equilibrium

7
Legacies of Patronage With Participation
  • Design/management mismatch
  • Chronic under-investment in maintenance
  • Poor water delivery drainage
  • Corruption inefficiency
  • Waterlogging salinity
  • Unaccountable bureaucracies
  • Weak incentives for farmer investment
  • Lack of clear property rights

8
PWP in Sri Lanka
  • PIM policy of 1988
  • Transferred OM at subsidiary levels
  • Transferred responsibility, not authority over
    OM plans, budgets, staff or fees
  • Govt responsible for rehabilitation subsidizes
    maintenance (w/o requirement for cost sharing)
  • WUA rules crop plans require Govt. approval

9
PWP in the Philippines
  • From late 1970s to FIOP
  • NIA partially responsible for revenues
  • NIA sets keeps irrigation service fee
  • OM transferred at subsidiary levels
  • Decision to transfer with NIA
  • NIA staff remain till retirement (under NIA)
  • Only 10-15 of schemes transferred (rest under
    management contracts)

10
Partnership With Empowerment
  • Objectives of PWE
  • Transform malignant equilibrium
  • Client-based service orientation
  • Sustainable productivity of irrigated agriculture

11
Six Principles of PWE
  • Restructure government
  • Empower water users
  • Farmer financial control
  • Create mutually accountable partnerships
  • Redesign govt assistance to stimulate local
    investment
  • Develop choice of service providers

12
Partnership With Empowerment in Andhra Pradesh,
India
  • White Paper of 1996 public consultations
  • APFMIS Act of 1997
  • Water charges tripled - Rs 60 to Rs 200/acre
  • June 1997 nearly 10,292 WUA created
  • Nov 1997 174 DC created
  • Minor rehabilitation, capacity building

13
Restructure Government(PWE in Andhra Pradesh)
  • Clear role change from management to support
    service
  • Asst engineers reassigned to Distributory
    Committees as competent authorities
  • Field operations staff reassigned to WUAs and
    DCs

14
2. Empower Water Users(PWE in Andhra Pradesh)
  • Clear legal status, strong sanction powers
  • Collective water right
  • Automatic membership democratic selection of
    rules leaders
  • Full control over OM, budgets, fees, staff
  • WUA federate to scheme level
  • Apex body at state level for lobbying

15
3. Farmer Financial Control(PWE in Andhra
Pradesh)
  • WUAs keep 90 of fee collected
  • WUAs determine use of fee other funds
  • Cost sharing
  • 50 at watercourse level
  • 20 at distributory level
  • 20 at project level (in major schemes)

16
4. Accountable Partnerships(PWE in Andhra
Pradesh)
  • Clear cost sharing arrangements
  • ID staff assigned to WUA
  • Open access to all information
  • Irrigation management audits (technical,
    financial, organizational)
  • Maintenance contracts issued through WUA

17
5. Stimulate Local Investment(PWE in Andhra
Pradesh)
  • Clear cost sharing at each level
  • WUA obligated to do maintenance to receive grants
    for repairs improvements
  • WUA given grants to commission maintenance
    contracts
  • WUA motivated to add local investment to
    government assistance

18
6. Choice of Service Providers(PWE in Andhra
Pradesh)
  • Right to accept or reject seconded ID staff
  • Right to make contracts with third parties
  • Right to select contractors

19
Partnership With Empowerment in Indonesia
  • Water Sector Adjustment and Irrigation Sector
    Reform Program
  • Government Regulation 77/2001
  • Ministerial Decrees on WUA and IMT (2001)
  • Advanced implementation in ten provinces with WB,
    ADB GON assistance

20
Restructure Government(PWE in Indonesia)
  • Stop governing irrigation schemes
  • Regulation, planning support services
  • Provide some irrigation services (based on
    request service agreements)
  • Subsidiarity to level that contains scheme
  • District Irrigation Commissions

21
2. Empower Water Users(PWE in Indonesia)
  • Democratic legal status of WUA
  • WUA federate to scheme level
  • Full transfer of authority for OM, financing,
    staff
  • Choice of service providers
  • Water use infrastructure rights
  • Member of District Irrigation Commission

22
3. Farmer Financial Control(PWE in Indonesia)
  • WUA determines type level of fees
  • WUA determines budget allocations
  • Fees not transferred to govt (unless special
    services contract)
  • WUA determines how govt assistance used

23
4. Accountable Partnerships(PWE in Indonesia)
  • District regulations
  • Transfer agreements
  • Service agreements
  • Irrigation management audits

24
5. Stimulate Local Investment(PWE in Indonesia)
  • Main responsibility for maintenance
    rehabilitation transferred to WUA
  • Replace rehabilitation model with incidental
    repair improvement approach
  • District Irrigation Improvement Funds
  • Demand-based allocation
  • Eligibility criteria (legal, positive audit)
  • Selection criteria (size of local investment)

25
6. Choice of Service Providers(PWE in Indonesia)
  • WUA have choice to use farmers, hired staff,
    government staff, contractor, etc.
  • Service agreements with government
  • WUA can select staff
  • WUA can provide honoraria/transportation
    payments, to enhance accountability

26
Extent of Implementation(PWE in Indonesia)
  • 39 districts have begun implementation
  • Federated WUA in 227 schemes (353,778 ha)
  • Transfer of 53 schemes
  • Service agreements in 26 schemes

27
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