Your search found 9 records
1 Zhang, Y.; Wang, J. 1991. Stochastic dynamic programming for regional exploitation of shallow groundwater resources. In ICID, The Special Technical Session Proceedings, Beijing, China, April 1991. Vol.1-B: Operation of irrigation systems. New Delhi, India: ICID. pp.77-82.
Groundwater management ; Stochastic process ; Recharge ; Aquifers ; Systems analysis / China / Henan Province / Shangqui County
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: ICID 631.7 G000 ICI Record No: H014730)

2 Walmsley, N. 1996. Case studies for water resource planning: Henan Province (PRC) Wallingford, UK: HR Wallingford. x, 32p. + annexes. (Report OD/TN 79)
Water resources ; National planning ; Case studies ; Institution building ; Policy ; Legislation ; Water allocation / China / Henan Province
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: 333.91 G592 WAL Record No: H020035)

3 Walmsley, N.; Hasnip, N. J. 1997. Case studies on water resource planning: Lessons learned and keys to success. Wallingford, UK: HR Wallingford Ltd. ix, 23p. + appendices. (Report OD 138)
Water resource management ; National planning ; Institution building ; Water policy ; Water law ; Legislation ; River basins ; Water allocation ; Case studies / Zimbabwe / India / China / Ethiopia / Australia / Henan Province / Tamil Nadu / Murray Darling Basin / Nile River / Tigrai Region / Mazowe Valley
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: P 4685 Record No: H021908)

4 Shah, T. 2003. Governing the groundwater economy: comparative analysis of national institutions and policies in South Asia, China and Mexico. Water Perspectives, 1:2-27
.
Groundwater irrigation ; Villages ; Bureaucracy ; Water law ; Water policy ; Institutions / South Asia / China / Mexico / Hebei Province / Henan Province / Shandong Province / Guanajuato
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: P 6366 Record No: H032521)
http://docs.watsan.net/Scanned_PDF_Files/Class_Code_2_Water/202.2-03GO-18978.pdf
https://vlibrary.iwmi.org/pdf/H032521.pdf
(4.00 MB) (3.22 MB)
In many parts of the world, especially in South Asia, the size of the groundwater economy has rapidly grown during the past 5 decades, and is growing still. Elsewhere in Asia— Sri Lanka, Vietnam, Laos, Thailand — and in Maghreb countries, groundwater use in agriculture has begun to grow during the past decade and is likely to peak in the coming 10 years. Global concerns with growing groundwater use in agriculture have focused mostly on its sustainability, quality degradation and adverse impacts on environment and ecological flows. Direct regulation of groundwater draft through stringent laws, regulatory frameworks and aggressive water pricing has been strongly advocated. However, despite the consensus for need to move in these directions, many governments have dragged their feet in operationalizing direct regulation. Where governments have taken pro-active stance, as in Mexico and to lesser extent, China, the impacts are variable. Governing groundwater economies is proving intractable; and responses to intensive groundwater use vary widely across nations. This paper attempts to understand why. It also argues that particularly in Asia, direct regulation of groundwater use may remain a pipe dream for a long time to come; and for effective governance of the groundwater economy, there is need to invent a wider toolkit - including direct and indirect instruments of management - that can be adapted to peculiar contexts of the groundwater economy in different countries.

5 Loeve, R.; Barker, R.; Dawe, D.; Hong Lin; Dong Bin. 2003. Growing more rice with less water: an overview of research in Liuyuankou Irrigation System, Henan province, China. In Yellow River Conservancy Commission. Proceedings, 1st International Yellow River Forum on River Basin Management – Volume II. Zhengzhou, China: The Yellow River Conservancy Publishing House. pp.175-187.
Irrigation programs ; Irrigation systems ; Water delivery ; Water allocation ; Irrigation management ; Rice ; Wheat ; Crop production / China / Henan Province / Liuyuankou Irrigation System
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: 333.91 G592 YEL Record No: H033856)

6 Quanhui, C.; Baishan, Z. 2003. Some ideas of the digital Yellow River construction in Henan Province. In Yellow River Conservancy Commission. Proceedings, 1st International Yellow River Forum on River Basin Management – Volume I. Zhengzhou, China: The Yellow River Conservancy Publishing House. pp.468-470.
River basin development ; Water resource management ; Information systems ; Databases ; Flood control ; Decision making ; Water allocation ; Canal regulation techniques / China / Henan Province
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: 333.91 G592 YEL Record No: H033822)

7 Wei, Y.; Chen, D.; Edis, R.; White, R.; Davidson, B.; Zhang, J.; Li, B. 2006. The perspective of farmers on why the adoption rate of water-saving irrigation techniques is low in China. In Willett, I. R.; Gao, Z. (Eds.) Agricultural water management in China: Proceedings of a workshop held in Beijing, China, 14 September 2005. Canberra, Australia: ACIAR. pp.153-160.
Water conservation ; Farmers’ attitudes ; Irrigation water ; Farm surveys / China / Henan Province / Fengqiu County
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: 631.7 G592 WIL Record No: H039229)

8 Jiajun, C.; Qiaoyu, G.; Jinsheng, W. 2003. Estimation of water table elevation by co-universal kriging. In Yellow River Conservancy Commission. Proceedings, 1st International Yellow River Forum on River Basin Management – Volume III. Zhengzhou, China: The Yellow River Conservancy Publishing House. pp.186-195.
Water table ; Groundwater ; Measurement ; Models / China / Henan Province / Xiuwu County
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: 333.91 G592 YEL Record No: H034677)

9 Shah, T. 2005. Governing the groundwater economy: comparative analysis of national institutions and policies in South Asia, China and Mexico. In Sahuquillo, A.; Capilla, J.; Martinez-Cortina, L.; Sanchez-Vila, X. (Eds.). Groundwater intensive use: Selected papers, SINEX, Valencia, Spain, 10-14 December 2002. Lieden, Netherlands: A.A. Balkema. pp.23-51. (IAH Selected Papers on Hydrogeology 7)
Groundwater irrigation ; Villages ; Bureaucracy ; Water law ; Water policy ; Institutions / South Asia / China / Mexico / Hebei Province / Henan Province / Shandong Province / Guanajuato
(Location: IWMI HQ Call no: IWMI 631.7.6.3 G000 SAH Record No: H046316)
http://docs.watsan.net/Scanned_PDF_Files/Class_Code_2_Water/202.2-03GO-18978.pdf
https://vlibrary.iwmi.org/pdf/H046316.pdf
(4.47 MB)
In many parts of the world, especially in South Asia, the size of the groundwater economy has rapidly grown during the past 5 decades, and is growing still. Elsewhere in Asia— Sri Lanka, Vietnam, Laos, Thailand — and in Maghreb countries, groundwater use in agriculture has begun to grow during the past decade and is likely to peak in the coming 10 years. Global concerns with growing groundwater use in agriculture have focused mostly on its sustainability, quality degradation and adverse impacts on environment and ecological flows. Direct regulation of groundwater draft through stringent laws, regulatory frameworks and aggressive water pricing has been strongly advocated. However, despite the consensus for need to move in these directions, many governments have dragged their feet in operationalizing direct regulation. Where governments have taken pro-active stance, as in Mexico and to lesser extent, China, the impacts are variable. Governing groundwater economies is proving intractable; and responses to intensive groundwater use vary widely across nations. This paper attempts to understand why. It also argues that particularly in Asia, direct regulation of groundwater use may remain a pipe dream for a long time to come; and for effective governance of the groundwater economy, there is need to invent a wider toolkit - including direct and indirect instruments of management - that can be adapted to peculiar contexts of the groundwater economy in different countries.

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