92 research outputs found

    The appropriateness of canal water supplies: The response of the farmers - A case study in the Fordwah/Eastern Sadiqia area, Punjab, Pakistan

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    Irrigation water / Irrigation canals / Water supply / Farmer managed irrigation systems / Pakistan

    Water markets in the Fordwah/Eastern Sadiqia Area: An answer to perceived deficiencies in canal water supplies?

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    Water marketWater supplyGroundwaterSurface irrigationConjunctive useTube well irrigationAgricultural productionWater policyPricingWater costsFarmer participation

    Management of private tubewells in a conjunctive use environment: A case study in the Mananwala Distributary Command Area, Punjab, Pakistan

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    Irrigation managementIrrigated farmingTube well irrigationGroundwaterSurface waterWatercoursesConjunctive useWater marketSalinityFarming systems

    Crop-based irrigation operations in the NWFP: Progress report no.2, Kharif 92 on the Technical Assistance Study, T.A. No.1481-PAK

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    Irrigation operation / Cropping systems / Irrigation canals / Water users' associations / Institutions / Pakistan

    Analyzing alternative policy instruments for the irrigation sector : an assessment of the potential for water market development in the Chishtian Sub-division, Pakistan

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    The increasing scarcity of water and financial resources has made the economic dimension of water an important element of irrigation sector policies. Water pricing is the means traditionally used to incorporate economic issues into irrigation sector policies. More recently, water markets have been proposed as an alternative to water pricing. From a theoretical point of view, water markets are expected to lead to an efficient allocation of water among water users, as well as to improve water use economic efficiency. However, the discrepancy between theoretical requirements and the existing characteristics of the irrigation sector is significant. Therefore, the potential for water markets in managing water resources is questioned.In Pakistan, consideration has recently been given to water markets as a means to improve the performance of irrigated agriculture. The present study investigates issues related to water markets in Pakistan using the example of the Chishtian Sub-division, an irrigation system located in the South-Punjab. Within the framework of an integrated approach that combines hydraulic, soil and economic issues, the study analyses the functioning and impact of existing surface and groundwater markets that have developed spontaneously within the tertiary units of the irrigation system. Although constraints remain on the functioning of these markets, water transactions significantly improve the flexibility in managing water resources without threatening significantly the sustainability of irrigated agriculture.This study also discusses elements related to the technical feasibility of water markets at higher spatial scales in the irrigation system, and their potential impact on agricultural production and the physical environment. The potential for reallocation of surface water in terms of increased farm gross income is the highest within and between tertiary units. Also, the impact of reallocation on farm gross income is higher when volumes of surface water are transacted independently of the time of the year, as opposed to yearly reallocations that would affect proportionally the supply of canal water received each month. Constraints related to the existing conveyance infrastructure are not seen as a major obstacle to water transactions. Changes in the operational rules required to develop water markets at higher spatial scales, however, may represent an important constraint to water market development. Also, the absence of storage facility limit the potential for temporal reallocation of surface water, thus the overall impact of potential water markets.The thesis concludes by emphasizing the importance of a combination of interventions to manage the irrigation sector, as well as to improve its performance in terms of agricultural production and sustainability. The need to analyze, compare and combine interventions, further stresses the relevance of an integrated approach that integrates disciplines, links decisional and bio-physical processes, and investigates the heterogeneity of these processes within the irrigation system

    The collaboration between IIMI and CEMAGREF in Pakistan: proceedings of a one-day workshop, International Irrigation Management Institute, Lahore, Pakistan, 3 October 1997

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    Irrigation management / Decision support tools / Operations / Maintenance / Irrigation canals / Water distribution / Sedimentation / Satellite surveys / Land use / Mapping / Remote sensing / GIS / Farming systems / Water market / Models / Salinity / Sodic soils / Policy / Agricultural production / Pakistan / Chishtian Subdivision / Fordwah Distributary

    Participatory rural appraisal for irrigation management research: Lessons from IIMI's experience

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    Irrigation managementParticipatory managementParticipatory rural appraisalResearch methodsFarmer managed irrigation systemsWatershedsPerformance indexesWater usersCase studies

    Crop-based irrigation operations in the North West Frontier Province of Pakistan. Vol.II: Research approach and interpretation. Final Report

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    Irrigation management / Crop-based irrigation / Research / Irrigation canals / Water demand / Performance evaluation / Agricultural production / Pakistan / North West Frontier Province

    Crop-based irrigation operations in the North West Frontier Province of Pakisatn. Vol.III: Data collection procedures and data sets. Final report

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    Irrigation management / Crop-based irrigation / Data collection / Watercourses / Water supply / Climate / Pakistan / North West Frontier Province
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