Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

In irrigation, China has taken a lead over India

The country’s watersavin­g irrigation system is the result of smart technology and strict quotas

- SRIROOP CHAUDHURI Krishna Kumar is former director, NCERT The views expressed are personal Sriroop Chaudhuri teaches environmen­tal and geospatial modelling studies at the OP Jindal Global University Sonipat, Haryana The views expressed are personal (Inner

While China and India walked abreast on agricultur­e till the early 1990s, China has taken substantia­lly longer strides since, whether it is in grain yield enhancemen­t or growth in agricultur­al capital formation or maintainin­g trade surplus with roughly about half on average per capita the farm holding as India (1.2 hectares as compared to about 0.6 hectares in China). How is the miracle happening?

It can be attributed largely to China’s commitment to improve agricultur­al resource administra­tion, especially with respect to on-farm irrigation water management. Globally, China stands with the largest irrigated area (69.1 as compared 67 million hectares in India). But to cope with such demand, China has made concrete moves to adopt advanced water-saving technologi­es. At present, 48% of irrigated area in China has micro-irrigation systems (drip/sprinklers) that make optimal use of water.

This officially begun with China’s 12th Five Year Plan (FYP) that saw more than RMB139 billion irrigation investment to equip 7.5 million hectares with highly efficient water-saving irrigation support. At present, the 13th five year plan aims to bring at least 64% irrigated area under it by 2020 and 75% by 2030. China began regulating the irrigation water quota (volume of water per unit irrigated area) with strictest norms as early as the 1990s.

In China, the private sector has begun pitching in through third-party services or public–private partnershi­ps (PPP). The China Developmen­t Bank recently announced a RMB500 billion loan to water resources projects for the tenure of the 13th FYP. In contrast, our NITI Aayog has from 2016 begun to welcome private financing in favourite gaming console? These things are important, but parents today are busy in their own complicate­d life to give time to their children.

Our education system, too, is hampering the innocence of children, by being so result oriented.

Nowhere in our education system do we have space for core values such as compassion, humility, politeness. And sadly, neither our education system nor our nuclear family culture has the time to cultivate these values. micro-irrigation support.

Fundamenta­lly, China’s radical adoption of water-saving irrigation ensues from inherently higher irrigation water use efficiency (the percentage of water applied and actually taken up by crops). With current average efficiency at 0.53 (up from 0.44 in 2004) China leaps way forward of India (barely 0.30). In both countries, the lion’s share of annual water withdrawal goes to irrigation while both suffer from acute water shortages that threaten the livelihood opportunit­ies of millions. While India is still dithering over measures to regulate groundwate­r abstractio­n, China has taken tough measures such as the Three Red Lines water policy to curb water use, increase water use efficiency and reduce water pollution risks.

Another bold step forward is to enact a stringent water tariff system to regulate withdrawal-to-consumptio­n ratio. In 2016, the Chinese Council rolled out 10 mutually reinforcin­g programmes to moderate water wastage in the country. This is complement­ed by the Water Rights Exchange policy (equitable sharing/trading between different sectors) and clean energy sources. On the latter, while China is rapidly moving towards solar-/wind-powered irrigation facilities that serve dual purposes —cutting down on low-quality on-farm electricit­y supply services (a major concern in India) as much as adhering to future emission reduction targets — electric-/diesel-powered pump-sets are rampant in India, causing huge air quality concerns.

China instituted its Water Resources Fee structure as early as in 1988 (the same as the European Union). In water over-extracted regions, the fee is doubled and in severely over-extracted regions, tripled. Where do we stand? Still encouragin­g rampant electricit­y pilferage and establishm­ent of a rural groundwate­r market (where poorer farmers depend on wealthier ones for infrastruc­ture support and get exploited )?

It is good to note that the recent Union Budget attempts to boost agricultur­al machinery. But appallingl­y, with just a little more than 12% of our irrigated area under micro-irrigation, 15 states under constant drought alerts, groundwate­r levels dropping in 14 states, expanding desertific­ation and percentage agricultur­al GDP on a steady downward spiral, it will be an uphill task to look China in the eye. It’s time to take a committed stand on subjects such as taking agricultur­e permanentl­y off electoral equations, to begin with, and enhancing the power grid with renewables.

WHILE INDIA IS STILL DITHERING OVER MEASURES TO REGULATE GROUNDWATE­R ABSTRACTIO­N, CHINA HAS TAKEN TOUGH MEASURES SUCH AS THE THREE RED LINES WATER POLICY TO CURB WATER USE

It’s high time that we realise that such values are important and must be taught to children at a young age because there’s no point complainin­g later about the kind of adults they will grow into. Yes, it’s important to work hard if you wish to leave behind a legacy for your children, but giving them your valuable time is as necessary.

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