Drain for Gain: Making Water Management Worth its Salt
English

About The Book

<p>Salinity affects 10 to 16% of all irrigated lands while the annual rate of land loss due to waterlogging and salinity is about 0.5 million hectares per year. In this dissertation the role of subsurface drainage to reduce these problems in irrigated agriculture in arid and semi-arid regions has been analysed and challenges for improving subsurface drainage practices have been formulated. </p><p>Although the installed subsurface drainage systems are in general technically sound and cost-effective drainage development lags behind irrigation development and consequently a substantial part of the irrigated areas suffers from waterlogging and salinity. This is mainly because the subsurface drainage systems are designed and implemented by government with the users the small farmers having little responsibility and having little input. In the adopted top-down approach the location-specific conditions and farmers’ preferences are hardly taken into consideration. Furthermore the emphasis has been on the technical aspects (the physical infrastructure) while the organizational aspects (institutional infrastructure) have been largely neglected.</p><p>To reverse the negative trend in salt build-up and waterlogging in irrigated lands in semi-arid and arid regions a number of challenges for enhancing the role of subsurface drainage have been formulated: (i) balancing top-down against bottom-up (ii) from standardization to flexibility and (iii) focus on capacity development.</p>
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