Your search found 6 records
1 Kashaigili, J. J.; Kadigi, R. M. J.; Sokile, C. S.; Mahoo, H. F. 2002. Constraints and potential for efficient inter-sectoral water allocations in Tanzania. Unpublished report. 34p.
Water allocation ; River basin management ; Water demand ; Water supply ; Water policy ; Water users ; Water use / Tanzania
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: P 6765 Record No: H040075)
http://www.research4development.info/PDF/Outputs/Water/R8064-WaterNET2002-Kashaigili_et_al.pdf
https://vlibrary.iwmi.org/pdf/H040075.pdf
(0.27 MB)

2 Mdemu, M. V.; Magayane, M. D.; Lankford, B.; Hatibu, N.; Kadigi, R. M. J.. 2003. Conjoining rainfall and irrigation seasonality to enhance productivity of water in large rice irrigated farms in the Upper Ruaha River Basin, Tanzania. Unpublished report. 7p.
River basins ; Catchment areas ; Rice ; Irrigated farming ; Rain ; Irrigation requirements ; Water balance / Tanzania / Ruaha River
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: P 6766 Record No: H034176)
https://vlibrary.iwmi.org/pdf/H_34176.pdf

3 Kadigi, R. M. J.. 2003. Rice production economics at the local and national levels: the case of Usangu Plain in Tanzania. Report of the “River Basin Management Research in Tanzania (RIPARWIN),” Soil-Water Management Research Group, Dept. of Agricultural Engineering & Land Planning, Sokoine University of Agriculture, Morogoro, Tanzania. x, 42p.
Rice ; Crop production ; Irrigated farming ; Prices ; Water use ; Irrigation water ; Productivity / Tanzania / Usangu Plain / Mbarali District
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: P 6769 Record No: H034179)
http://www.dfid.gov.uk/r4d/PDF/Outputs/Water/R8064-Report-ELEBWU_3_Report.pdf
https://vlibrary.iwmi.org/pdf/H_34179.pdf

4 Kadigi, R. M. J.; Mdoe, N. S.; Lankford, B. A.; Morardet, Sylvie. 2005. The value of water for irrigated rice and hydropower generation in the Great Ruaha, Tanzania. Paper presented at the East Africa Integrated River Basin Management Conference, Sokoine University of Agriculture, Morogoro, Tanzania, 7-9 March 2005. [Vol.2]. Funded by IWMI, and others. 13p.
River basins ; Irrigated farming ; Rice ; Productivity ; Models ; Hydroelectric schemes ; Economic aspects / Tanzania / Great Ruaha River basin
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: IWMI 333.91 G132 SOK Record No: H037531)
https://publications.iwmi.org/pdf/H037531.pdf

5 Sokile, C. S.; Kashaigili, J. J.; Kadigi, R. M. J.. 2003. Towards an integrated water resource management in Tanzania: the role of appropriate institutional framework in Rufiji Basin. Physics and Chemistry of the Earth, 28: 1015–1023.
Water resource management ; Institutions ; Water user associations ; Water rights ; Water law / Tanzania / Rufiji Basin / Usangu Basin
(Location: IWMI HQ Record No: H041070)
https://vlibrary.iwmi.org/pdf/H041070.pdf
Over the past 50 years, changes in the intersectoral water use in the Rufiji Basin have been enormous. A growing human population, migration and increasing demands in the basin have culminated this change. The basin, however, still lack an appropriate integrated management approach. This has resulted into inter- institutional conflicts, ineffectiveness, gaps in management imperatives and duplication of efforts. This paper reviews the existing institutional linkages identifies the gap and proposes an appropriate institutional framework which involve questions of institutional arrangements and the assignment of responsibilities among various levels of development, ensures stakeholders participation, accommodates adaptive change and remain self sustainable. The basic argument of this paper is that water management issue is both a question of developing stakeholders’ participation and transferring state’s competence to water user associations. Such an endeavour requires a complete and complex institutional framework, which would define clearly the role and rule of each stakeholder in water resource management. The paper further argues that; in Tanzania, the institutions that are involved in water management are loosely connected and lack basic coordination and are often at the periphery of the water management agenda––divorced from the water management programs; the predominance of isolated institutions locked up in narrowly defined activities with no interactive learning process will continue to hamper national aspirations to manage water; and that to change this situation will require innovative reforms in national institutions and institutional learning.

6 Kadigi, R. M. J.; Mdoe, N. S.; Lankford, B. A.; Morardet, Sylvie. 2005. The value of water for irrigated paddy and hydropower generation in the Great Ruaha, Tanzania. In Lankford, B. A.; Mahoo, H. F. (Eds.). Proceedings of East Africa Integrated River Basin Management Conference, Sokoine University of Agriculture, Morogoro, Tanzania, 7 – 9 March 2005. Theme five: water economics and livelihoods. Morogoro, Tanzania: Soil-Water Management Research Group, Sokoine University of Agriculture. pp.265-278.
Irrigated farming ; Rice ; Water power / Tanzania / Great Ruaha
(Location: IWMI HQ Call no: CD Col Record No: H041165)
http://www.iwmi.cgiar.org/Research_Impacts/Research_Themes/BasinWaterManagement/RIPARWIN/PDFs/6%20Kadigi%20SS%20FINAL%20EDIT.pdf
The need to achieve efficient, equitable and sustainable use of water resources to meet water demands of different sectors is pressing, particularly in areas where water resources are dwindling. Along with this is the quest for a good understanding of the value of water in its different uses. Using the Change in Net Income method, this paper presents an assessment of the value of water in irrigated paddy and hydroelectric power (HEP) generation in the Great Ruaha (GR) Catchment in Tanzania. The average values of water for irrigated paddy were estimated at $ 0.01 and 0.04 per m3 for abstracted and consumed water respectively. For HEP, the values were relatively higher ($ 0.06-0.21 per m3 for gross and consumed water respectively). Yet irrigated paddy also contributes much: it supports the livelihoods of about 30,000 agrarian families in Usangu with average annual gross income of about US $ 911.90 per annum per family and the GR paddy contributes about 14-24% to national paddy production. Understanding these benefits is key to fostering informed debate on water management and allocation, identifying the base for making ‘agreeable’ trade-offs, the potential for improvement, and creating linkages with water allocation options.

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