Chapter 1. Introduction.- Chapter 2. Water Saving and Yield Enhancing Micro Irrigation Technologies in India: Theory and Practice.- Chapter 3. Current State of Drip Adoption for Irrigation of crops in Maharashtra.- Chapter 4. Micro-Irrigation in Karnataka: Potential and Constraints for Adoption.- Chapter 5. State of Development and adoption of Micro Irrigation Systems in Gujarat.- Chapter 6. ‘Wet’ Water Saving and Social Benefits from Micro Irrigation: A Study from IGNP Command Area in Rajasthan.- Chapter 7. Social Benefit Cost Analysis of Drip Irrigation.- Chapter 8. Determinants of Adopting and Accessing Benefits of Environmentally Feasible Technologies: A study of Micro Irrigation Systems in North Gujarat, Western India.- Chapter 9. Economic and Social Feasibility of Solar Powered Pumpsets in India.- Chapter 10. Conclusions and Areas for Future Research.
P.K. Viswanathan is a PhD in Economics from Institute for Social and Economic Change,
Bangalore. He started his academic career in 1994 as a Scientist (Eco.) at the
Rubber Research Institute of India. He was a Post-Doctoral Fellow at the Asian
Institute of Technology (AIT) Bangkok during 2005 and later at the Institute
for Population and Social Research, Mahidol University, Thailand during
2006-07. Since 2007, he has been working as Associate Professor, Gujarat
Institute of Development Research, Ahmedabad, India. Areas of his research
interests include: economics and management of natural resources; analysis of water
institutions and policies; agrarian transformation and rural livelihoods;
economics of climate change and conservation of natural resources. He also
teaches a course on Environmental Management and Sustainable Development at the
Amrita School of Business, Amrita University, Cochin. He also had worked as an
International Consultant for Agricultural Census Studies, FAO of the United
Nations, Lao PDR, Vientiane.
M. Dinesh Kumar is a Ph. D in
Water Management, and has 25 years of professional experience undertaking
research, action research, field implementation, consulting and training in the
field of water resources. He is currently the Executive Director of Institute
for Resource Analysis and Policy (IRAP) in Hyderabad, India. He has nearly 150
publications to his credit, including five books, three edited volumes, and
several papers in international journals. His internationally acclaimed works
are on virtual water trade, energy-groundwater nexus, agricultural water
productivity, economics of water harvesting and artificial groundwater
recharge, and water management in river basins and integrated urban water
management. He is associate Editor of Water Policy and Member of the Editorial
Board of Int. Journal of Water Resources
Development.
A. Narayanamoorthy is presently working
as Professor and Head, Department of Economics and Rural Development, Alagappa
University, Tamil Nadu, India. Earlier,
he worked with the Gokhale Institute of Politics and Economics, Pune, Maharashtra
and also with the Madras Institute of Development Studies, Chennai. He
specializes in the area of irrigation including micro irrigation and watershed
management. He has published six books, three mimeographs and over 100 research
papers in well recognised international and national journals. He is a
recipient of the prestigious Professor Ramesh Chandra Agrawal Award of
excellence awarded for the outstanding contribution in the field of
agricultural economics by the Indian Society of Agricultural Economics, Mumbai.
The National Bank for Agriculture and Rural Development (NABARD), Mumbai, has
also awarded the coveted NABARD Chair Professor position to him, which is one
among the five chairs established at the all India level. He also worked as the
members of the policy committees constituted by the Government of India, New
Delhi.
This book takes stock of micro irrigation systems (MIS), the technological intervention in India’s agricultural and water management sectors, over the past couple of decades. Based on empirical research from the major agriculturally dynamic states, viz., Gujarat, Rajasthan, Maharashtra, Tamil Nadu, Andhra Pradesh and Karnataka, the book provides a nuanced understanding and objective assessment of the implementation and adoption of MIS across these states. It addresses several of the questions related to adoption and impacts of MIS in India. On the adoption side, the key question that the book addresses is which segment of the farming community adopts MIS across states? The impacts analysed include those on physical, agronomic and economic aspects. At the macro level, the question being asked is about the future potential of MIS in terms of saving water from agriculture and making more water available for environment. The book also addresses the question of the positive/negative externalities and real social benefits and costs from the use of MIS, a major justification for heavy capital subsidies for its purchase by farmers. It also brings out certain critical concerns pertaining to MIS adoption, which need to be addressed through more empirical research based on longitudinal panel/ cross sectional data. The book would be of great use to researchers (agricultural water management, irrigation economics), students of water resource engineering, irrigation engineering and water resources management, as well as to policy makers and agricultural water management experts – national and international.