Your search found 4 records
1 Moghal, M. A.; Beekma, J.; Beekman, W.; Akhter, J. 1993. Field determination of soil hydraulic properties for simulation of the optimum watertable regime. Irrigation and Drainage Systems, 6(4):275-290.
Water table ; Simulation ; Hydraulics ; Soil properties
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: PER Record No: H013133)

2 Beekma, J.. 1993. Soil salinization and sodification in tubewell irrigated fields of Punjab, Pakistan: Mission report. Mission report to IIMI-Pakistan, 31 July - 6 August 1993. i, 12p.
Soil salinity ; Tube wells ; Salinity control ; Field tests ; Simulation models ; Calibrations / Pakistan / Punjab
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: P 2994 Record No: H013721)
https://vlibrary.iwmi.org/pdf/H013721.pdf

3 Cassara, M.; Beekma, J.; de Strasser, L.; Anarbekov, Oyture; Murzaeva, Makhliyo; Giska, S.; Dorre, A. 2020. Local and national institutions and policies governing water resources management. In Xenarios, S.; Schmidt-Vogt, D.; Qadir, M.; Janusz-Pawletta, B.; Abdullaev, I. (Eds.). The Aral Sea Basin: water for sustainable development in Central Asia. Oxon, UK: Routledge - Earthscan. pp.136-154. (Earthscan Series on Major River Basins of the World)
Integrated management ; Water resources ; Water management ; Water institutions ; Water policy ; Water governance ; Institutional reform ; Sustainable Development Goals ; Food security ; Energy ; Nexus ; Water user associations ; Information systems ; Indigenous knowledge ; River basins / Central Asia / Kazakhstan / Kyrgyzstan / Tajikistan / Turkmenistan / Uzbekistan / Aral Sea Basin / Syr Darya River Basin
(Location: IWMI HQ Call no: e-copy only Record No: H049421)
https://vlibrary.iwmi.org/pdf/H049421.pdf
(25.40 MB)

4 Beekma, J.; Bird, J.; Mersha, A. N.; Reinhard, S.; Prathapar, S. A.; Rasul, G.; Richey, J.; Van Campen, J.; Ragab, R.; Perry, C.; Mohtar, R.; Tollefson, L.; Tian, F. 2021. Enabling policy environment for water, food and energy security. Irrigation and Drainage, 18p. (Online first) [doi: https://doi.org/10.1002/ird.2560]
Water security ; Food security ; Energy consumption ; Nexus ; Policies ; Water supply ; Water productivity ; Groundwater ; Water use ; Agriculture ; Greenhouses ; Solar energy ; Technology ; Innovation ; Socioeconomic development ; Sustainable development ; Governance ; Markets ; Models
(Location: IWMI HQ Call no: e-copy only Record No: H050156)
https://vlibrary.iwmi.org/pdf/H050156.pdf
(1.35 MB)
The complexity of water, food and energy security is analysed from the perspectives of (i) water and food and (ii) water and energy and their interconnectivity and focuses ultimately on water as a primary input into processes, the entry point for participants of the Third World Irrigation Forum.
The paper provides an overview of trends in water, food and energy security, highlights the interconnectivity between the various elements and introduces the water–food–energy nexus as a tool for improving productivity and sector policies, avoiding unintended consequences on other sectors. Invariably, there will be trade-offs and the challenge is to find combinations of measures that have a net positive outcome. In order to quantify security in the three elements and the trade-offs between them, emerging modelling approaches for the nexus are discussed.
Sub-theme 3 of the forum focuses on productivity and technology interventions1 and sub-theme 2 on stakeholder interaction. The combination of modelling, technology innovations and stakeholder participation in a water–food–energy nexus approach leads to better understanding of linkages and more robust policies and is used to derive recommendations for an enabling policy environment.

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