Water Management
Water Management
Water Management
Dr Martin Burton
Outline of presentation
3500
3000
2500
2000
1500
1000
500
0
1900 1910 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000
Year
Agricultural use Industrial use Municipal use
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
Source: Office of the Registrar General & Census Commissioner, India, Government of
India, Ministry of Home Affairs, 2011
Phases of river basin development
Over-abstraction of
Renewable water
groundwater
resource
Water resource volume
Potentially
available water
resource
Available
water
resource
Water resource
depleted or used
TIME
}
•Reducing reserve for development
•Increased risk from droughts
•Climate change
•Management options constrained
•Involvement of stakeholders
•Need for information dissemination Areas for action:
•Institutional reform in the water sector
•Engagement with stakeholders
•Re-education of water professionals
•Education of politicians and planners
•Knowledge management and dissemination
•Improved efficiency and productivity of water
•Demand management, reduction in water use
•Water trading
Time
Performance gap in irrigated agriculture
Performance measures:
• Crop area
Achievable performance • Crop yield
level • Crop quality
• Total crop production
• Income from agricultural enterprises
Performance
Current performance
Time
Irrigation development 1960-2007
50 36
(billion US$, in 2000 prices)
30
(million ha)
Expenditure
24
30
18
20
12
10
6
0 0
1960 1970 1980 1990 2000
Expenditure Tanks Canals Groundwater
State Government
SWC members
Committees and Agricultural
Expert Panels
Department
Expert Panel on
Irrigation
Climate Change State Water Council
Department
Environment (SWC) Industry
Dam Safety
Revenue
Committee State Water Administration
Rural Development
(SWA)
Representation by
regional bodies of Municipal
State and other Administration
organisations
Energy Department
Groundwater
Basin Water Basin Water Department
Administration Councils
(BWC) Environment
(BWA)
Office of the
SWC
Secretariat
Tons Sub-Basin
Part II -
Main system management -
Reform of the Irrigation
Department
Irrigation and Drainage systems management, operation and maintenance
Problem tree – Part I (System focussed)
Part II
Water
Finance
Resources
Water charge Inadequate Low Outdated fee Allocated Pressure on No water Excessive Inadequate
not related to Political
funds for levels of collection MOM funds land and rights – No development management,
service system MOM fee systems -over- do not match interference in control and
water guaranteed of
provided collection staffed, identified water resources regulation of
resources water supply groundwater
inefficient, needs and irrigation WR use and
costly development
Maintenance Operation
(Main System) (Main System)
Silt entry Lack of Large Oudated repair Little modern The ID can no longer
Protective irrigation ID has little
into canal adequate maintenance and maintenance technology used enforce the cropping
cannot work if the concept of
systems. maintenance requirement in (R&M) norms in MOM of I&D pattern as it has done
management system is service
many systems systems at in the past
not there to enforce it. delivery ethos.
Divisional level.
Service
On-Farm
Delivery
ID not adapting to Lack of, or one-sided, Poor levels of System not Small plot Cropping pattern
changed dynamics – service provision service to designed for Inadequate
sizes , plot restricted due to pattern
from top-down to contracts water users full cropping liaison between
location of main system water
bottom-up customer ID and farmers
supply
focus
Management
Management
Management Processes/
Policy
Procedures
Too much Top down Blind spots on Rapid ID staff positions Inadequate and Inadequate
Lack of Little clear vision
focus on attitude to points and form of turnover of open to political outdated working
expectations for coming from
construction – farmers interventions to staff in ID in interference office/support relations
performance. Lack within the ID for
drives staffing improve key positions facilities with water
of standards and modernisation
with civil performance. (computers,etc) users
measurement of
engineers
performance.
Education
HRM
and Training
Continued
from Part I
Issues
• Service Delivery
– Top-down
• Operation (Main system)
– Supply-orientated, relatively operation rules, limited measurement
• Maintenance (Main system)
– Outdated R&M norms and procedures
– Inadequate funds
• Finance
– Water charges a tax, not a service fee. Not linked to needs.
– Low recovery rates
– Outdated fee assessment and recovery procedures
• Human resources management, education and training
– Outdated HR management processes and procedures – esp. for WALMIs
• Management policy, processes and procedures
– Focused on construction rather than water management
– Employs mainly civil engineers
– Lack of focus on individual system performance
– Outdated systems, processes and procedures
Action Plan – ID Reform
• Change from construction to management focus
• Restructure the whole organisation, separate construction and
management, operation and maintenance (MOM)
• Employ new multi-disciplinary staff, not just civil engineers
• Radically change the human resources management
• Change staff attitudes – service delivery, farmers as clients, etc.
• Promote able and motivated younger staff to senior positions
• Modernize management systems (RS,GIS, MIS, etc.)
• Use asset management planning
• Focus on service delivery and partnership with water users
• Introduce performance-based management systems
• Support water users associations and farmer participation
• Free up cropping patterns to match farmer demands
• Modernise system management – conjunctive use, etc.
• Consider public-private partnership for system management
Service delivery relationships
Payment
Service
Agreement
S
Service Provider C
Water User
Service
S - Specification
C - Conditions
Budget
request
Revenue
WA Department
Individual Notification of
assessment WA
payment
required
Budget Payment
Service
Provider WA Water User
(District ID)
Service
WA – Water Act
Use of remote sensing for scheme
performance assessment
Relative water supply (supply/demand)
0.000
0.200
0.400
0.600
0.800
1.000
1.200
1.400
1.600
1.800
W ion
oo
ri
ne
n
Et
on
Lo
Bu g a
nd n
G- ab
M er
W g
D
Py aw
ra so
m n
id
-B
oo
G- W rt
M in
n
W al
S ea
G- hep h
M pa
G- W rt
M Ro on
W ch
T es
or te
ru r
m
Water delivered per unit area
ba
Co rr
nd y
am
G- in
M
W e
N
ya
Ce S h
nt u nr
ra ay
lI si
rr a
ig
.(
S
O A
rd )
Ri
ve
r
Benchmarking system performance –
Australia
Performance management
- Saving lost production
Productivity
1 Growth
following
Rehabilitation
rehabilitation
project
2 1 – Early rehabilitation
Period of 2 – Late rehabilitation
Growth stability, growth Period of
Rainfed following and adequate decline, Return
construction of levels of followed by to
new scheme maintenance rehabilitation rainfed
Time
Management effort required for different
irrigation practices
Management effort
Additional effort
required to move Modern management:
from one level to
the next •Agree cropping pattern with water
users at start of season based on
available water supply
•Schedule to match demands
•Measure and monitor allocations
•Assess performance
•Construct channels
•Flood land
Time
Part III –
Reform at the on-farm level
On-farm issues
– Large number of small landholdings
– Inadequately organised water distribution
– Low crop yields
– Low water use productivity
– Little or no planning for conjunctive use of surface and groundwater
– Insufficient uptake of modern technologies
WUA issues
– Leadership – Presidential rather than Chairman. No role for
Management Committee
– Role of Competent Authority (e.g. ID Engineer as Secretary)
– Limited guidance, support and training provided by government
– Governance structure - need to separate governance and
management
– Not able to set and collect own service fees.
– No WUA staff – who manages the water distribution?
– Elections for all WUA Management Committee every 5 years
– Size of WUAs an issue : 200-300ha too small, viable size1,200-
1,500 ha.
– “Flowback” system excessively bureaucratic, ID retains full control
of funds
– ID control maintenance work process
– No offices, equipment or transport.
– No water rights or water entitlement
On-farm Action Plan
Action Plan:
– Restructure current CAD&WM programme
– Review, discuss and redraft PIM Act
– Prepare draft Charter for issuing to WUAs
– Establish WUA Regulatory Authority
– Strengthen WALMIs – build capacity in IMT and water management
– Establish and train WUA Support Units at Circle/Divisional level
– Form and train WUA support team at Sub-Divisional level
– Awareness raising and training within ID
On-farm Action Plan
Action Plan (cont.):
– Research and develop water management approaches for different
types and sizes of irrigation scheme, incorporating conjunctive use
of surface and ground water. Prepare training material.
– Run awareness raising and re-engagement workshops for WUAs
– Individual WUAs discuss and agree their Charter. Change WUA
management processes to match. Incorporate rules for water
allocation and management during water short years.
– Establish chak-based representative system. Train representatives.
– Establish revised budgeting, fee setting and collection procedures
based on asset management planning.
– Plan, design and implement on-farm works (measuring structures,
field channels, lining,, etc.).
– Develop procedures to measure performance and progress.
On-farm Action Plan
Dharoi Irrigation Scheme, Gujarat
On-farm Action Plan
160
100
140
Water level/depth (mm)
120 80
Rainfall (mm)
100
60
80
60 40
40
20
20
0 0
1 4 7 10 13 16 19 22 25 28 31 3 6 9 12 15 18 21 24 27 30 2 5 8 11 14 17 20 23 26 29 2 5 8 11 14 17 20 23 26 29
July August September October