Your search found 44 records
1 Kumar, M. Dinesh. 2002. Integrated water management in the face of growing demand and threatened resource base in North Gujarat: constraints and opportunities: a pilot project to protect north Gujarat's groundwater ecology and agricultural economy. IWMI-TATA Water Policy Research Program Annual Partners' Meet, 2002. Vallabh Vidyanagar, Gujarat, India: IWMI-TATA Water Policy Research Program. 31p.
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: IWMI 631.7.6.3 G635 KUM Record No: H029644)
(596 KB)
2 Kumar, M. Dinesh. 2003. Micro management of groundwater in North Gujarat. IWMI-Tata Water Policy Research Highlight, 5/2003. 7p.
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: IWMI 631.7.6.3 G635 KUM Record No: H031799)
(2.32 MB)
Research highlight based on a paper titled ôMicro management of water in North Gujarat: Issues, prospects and directions for futureö
3 Kumar, M. Dinesh. 2004. Roof water harvesting for domestic water security: who gains and who loses? Water International, 29(1):43-53.
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: IWMI 628.4 G635 KUM, PER Record No: H046300)
Roof water harvesting is being widely promoted as a panacea for the growing drinking water crisis in India and many underdeveloped and developing countries. This article analyzes the scope, physical feasibility, and economic viability of roof water harvesting systems across classes and under different physical and socioeconomic situations. This article argues that roof water harvesting systems (RWHS) are not alternative to public systems in urban and rural areas of regions receiving low rainfall. Hydrological opportunities for RWHS are very poor in urban and rural areas. The systems offer very little scope in ensuring domestic water security for urban housing stocks of low- and middle-income groups. At the same time, they offer tremendous potential for independent bungalows having large roof area. However, their physical feasibility is very poor in urban areas. Their economic viability as a supplementary source of domestic water supply seems to be poor in urban areas, when compared to augmenting the supplies from the existing public systems. The incredibly low rates charged for domestic supplies by urban water utilities and government subsidies for RWHS would only lead to the urban elite increasing their access to water supplies, while the burden on water utilities would remain unchanged. This will lead to greater inequities in access to water supplies. At the same time, in rural areas with dispersed populations and hilly areas, RWHS may be economically viable as a supplementary source to already existing public water supply schemes. But as its impacts are not likely to be uniform across classes, government subsidies are not desirable. In hilly regions receiving high rainfalls, government investment for community water supply schemes could be replaced by heavy subsidies for installation of RWHS.
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: P 7004 Record No: H035374)
A study carried out in four villages in Banaskantha district of Gujarat estimated that 60 per cent of the net farm output generated through groundwater use in agriculture came from dairying. Tubewell irrigation supports three-quarters of the farming household income in these villages and, strangely, this share is larger for water buyers and farm labourers than for tubewell owners. This is despite the fact that tubewell irrigation costs have soared rapidly with depleting water tables. Despite the high costs and depleting water tables, irrigated areas have increased steadily, making livelihoods even more precariously dependent upon sustainable groundwater management.
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: P 7004 Record No: H035376)
North Gujarat is naturally endowed with one of the richest alluvial aquifers of India but its uncontrolled exploitation for irrigation has resulted in many undesirable consequences. A major hydrological opportunity for rejuvenation of the aquifer system is provided by the availability of unutilized flows from Narmada basin. It is proposed to divert this water to north Gujarat through the Narmada main canal, and use the existing canal networks and village ponds and tanks in the region to activate a decentralized recharge process. This paper examines its physical and economic feasibility. An evaluation of two recharge scenarios in north Gujarat shows that using pumped water for recharging outside the designated command area may prove to be an uneconomical proposition, unless there is substantial increase in the productivity of water. Recharge within the command would be much more economical.
6 Kumar, M. Dinesh; Shah, Tushaar; Bhatt, Maulik; Kapadia, Madhu. 2004. Dripping water to a water guzzler: techno economic evaluation of drip irrigation of Alfalfa in North Gujarat, India. Paper presented at the Asia Oceania Geoscience Society (AOGS) APHW Sessions – 56 TWM-A257, 14 May 2004. 8p.
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: IWMI 631.7.1 G635 KUM Record No: H036053)
7 Talati, Jayesh; Kumar, M. Dinesh; Ravindranath, R. 2005. Local and sub-basin level impact of watershed development projects: hydrological and socioeconomic analysis for two sub-basins of Narmada. IWMI-Tata Water Policy Research Highlight, 15/2005. 11p.
(Location: IWMI HQ Call no: IWMI 631.7 G635 TAL Record No: H036605)
(488 KB)
8 Kumar, M. Dinesh; Singh, Om Prakash. 2005. Which water counts? blue and green water use and productivity in the Narmada Basin. IWMI-Tata Water Policy Research Highlight, 8/2005. 11p.
(Location: IWMI HQ Call no: IWMI 631.7.5 G635 KUM Record No: H036598)
(432 KB)
Research highlight based on a paper titled “The blue and green water use and productivity in agriculture: Study from Narmada River Basin, Madhya Pradesh, India.”
9 Kumar, M. Dinesh. 2005. Impact of water prices and volumetric water allocation on water productivity: comparative analysis of well owners, water buyers and shareholders. IWMI-Tata Water Policy Research Highlight, 11/2005. 11p.
(Location: IWMI HQ Call no: IWMI 631.7.4 G635 KUM Record No: H036601)
(304 KB)
(Location: IWMI HQ Call no: IWMI 631.7 G635 SIN Record No: H036608)
(424 KB)
(Location: IWMI HQ Call no: IWMI 333.91 G635 KUM Record No: H036614)
(616 KB)
12 Kumar, M. Dinesh; Singh, Om Prakash. 2005. Virtual water in global food and water policy making: is there a need for rethinking? IWMI-Tata Water Policy Research Highlight, 3/2005. 7p.
(Location: IWMI HQ Call no: IWMI 631.7.3 G000 KUM Record No: H036595)
(340 KB)
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: IWMI 631.7.4 G635 KUM Record No: H036730)
14 Kumar, M. Dinesh. 2003. Demand management in the face of growing water scarcity and conflicts in India: institutional and policy alternatives for future. In Chopra, K.; Hanumantha Rao, C. H.; Sengupta, R. (Eds.). Water resources, sustainable livelihoods and eco-system services. New Delhi, India: Concept publishing Company, for Indian Society for Ecological Economics. pp.97-131.
(Location: IWMI HQ Call no: 333.91 G635 CHO Record No: H040949)
(Location: IWMI HQ Call no: IWMI 333.91 G635 KUM Record No: H041535)
The analysis presented in this paper shows that in water-scarce regions of India, run-off harvesting does not offer any potential for groundwater recharge or improving water supplies at the basin scale. The issues are many: (1) Water harvesting in the “closed” basins have downstream negative hydrological impacts. (2) Due to high inter-annual variability in rainfall and therefore run-off, during drought years the water harvesting structures have become highly unreliable, whereas an attempt to capture run-off during wet years would remarkably increase the unit cost of harvesting water. (3) In closed basins, intensive water harvesting would lead to negative welfare outcomes due to high negative externalities at higher degrees of basin development. (4) Even at the local level, physical efficiency of water harvesting is likely to be poor, mainly due to groundwater-surface water interactions and the poor storage capacity of hard rock aquifers underlying most of the water-scarce regions. The artificial recharge systems in natural water-scarce areas in India are economically unviable. Also, the much talked about virtues such as promoting equity in access to water, social justice, water security for the poor, and realisation of greater economic value from the use of water, can be hardly achieved through water harvesting programmes in water-scarce regions, as practised today.
(Location: IWMI HQ Call no: IWMI 631.7 G635 KUM Record No: H041536)
The economic value of water should be markedly higher in water-scarce regions than in water-rich regions. Similarly, then the incremental return per unit of land should be higher where land is scarcer. These hypotheses are tested by comparing the situation in western Punjab, which is land-rich and naturally water-scarce and eastern Uttar Pradesh which is land-scarce and water-rich. Our regression analysis shows that every extra unit of water diverted for agriculture generates more economic surplus in western Punjab while every extra unit of land put under cultivation generates more economic surplus in eastern Uttar Pradesh. Hence, transfer of water from a water-rich, land-scarce region to a water-scarce, land-rich region for agriculture might result in the realization of higher economic value.
17 Shah, Zankhana; Kumar, M. Dinesh. 2008. In the midst of the large dam controversy: objectives, criteria for assessing large water storages in the developing world. Water Resources Management, 22(12):1799-1824.
(Location: IWMI HQ Call no: IWMI 627.8 G000 SHA Record No: H041538)
(0.71 MB)
18 Kumar, M. Dinesh; Turral, Hugh; Sharma, Bharat R.; Amarasinghe, Upali A.; Singh, O. P. 2008. Water saving and yield enhancing micro-irrigation technologies in India: when and where can they become best bet technologies? Kumar, M. Dinesh (Ed.). Managing water in the face of growing scarcity, inequity and declining returns: exploring fresh approaches. Proceedings of the 7th Annual Partners Meet, IWMI TATA Water Policy Research Program, ICRISAT, Patancheru, Hyderabad, India, 2-4 April 2008. Vol.1. Hyderabad, India: International Water Management Institute (IWMI), South Asia Sub Regional Office. pp.1-36.
(Location: IWMI HQ Call no: IWMI 631.7 G635 KUM Record No: H041700)
19 Shah, Zankhana; Kumar, M. Dinesh. 2008. In the midst of the large dam controversy: objectives and criteria for assessing large water storages in the developing world. In Amarasinghe, Upali A.; Sharma, Bharat R. (Eds.) Strategic Analyses of the National River Linking Project (NRLP) of India, Series 2. Proceedings of the Workshop on Analyses of Hydrological, Social and Ecological Issues of the NRLP, New Delhi, India, 9-10 October 2007. Colombo, Sri Lanka: International Water Management Institute (IWMI) pp.107-138.
(Location: IWMI HQ Call no: IWMI 333.9162 G635 AMA Record No: H041801)
(389.99 KB)
20 Kumar, M. Dinesh; Patel, Ankit; Singh, O. P. 2008. Rainwater harvesting in the water-scarce regions of India: potential and pitfalls. In Amarasinghe, Upali A.; Sharma, Bharat R. (Eds.) Strategic Analyses of the National River Linking Project (NRLP) of India, Series 2. Proceedings of the Workshop on Analyses of Hydrological, Social and Ecological Issues of the NRLP, New Delhi, India, 9-10 October 2007. Colombo, Sri Lanka: International Water Management Institute (IWMI) pp.289-314.
(Location: IWMI HQ Call no: IWMI 333.9162 G635 AMA Record No: H041809)
(675.70 KB)
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