2010
DOI: 10.1596/27818
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Sustainable Groundwater Irrigation

Abstract: The aim of this paper is to provide a strategic overview of a decade of experience in supporting various 'public administrations' around the world in their efforts to manage intensive (and in many cases excessive) groundwater resource exploitation for agricultural irrigation. Special emphasis is put on a number of aquifers, mainly in South & East Asia and Latin America, where GW•MATE has either been involved with the implementation of comprehensive 'pilot' projects over 3-5 years (in Argentina, Brazil, China a… Show more

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Cited by 36 publications
(7 citation statements)
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“…Stakeholder involvement is widely recognized as an important action to design and implement sustainable groundwater management [40,41]. This study is based on stakeholder engagement in the selected four water-stressed Mediterranean countries, using the methodological approach shown in Figure 6.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Stakeholder involvement is widely recognized as an important action to design and implement sustainable groundwater management [40,41]. This study is based on stakeholder engagement in the selected four water-stressed Mediterranean countries, using the methodological approach shown in Figure 6.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, there were also clear limitations on the data used in these studies (mainly related to constraints on data availability and uncertainty, as well as distinctions between consumptive and non-consumptive use). 72 Stakeholders were therefore advised to consider these limitations in their dialogue and before the results were used in final decision making.…”
Section: Substitution or Replacement Costmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…89 In many cases, these go some way to reducing the difference in price between use for irrigation of groundwater and canal-water (which itself has a long history of being highly subsidised). Although rural energy subsidies can often be politically justified, it has to be recognised that the adoption of flat-rate rural electricity tariffs (relating only to pump horse-power alone) is highly perverse, 90 since it results in farmers becoming insulated from one of the principal cost items associated with a falling water-table. It can also lead to extremely inefficient pumping practices in shallow aquifers with farmers continuing to operate waterwells at groundwater levels which are far too low and at which entry and pump friction losses are very high.…”
Section: Figure 42 Historical Influence Of Rural Electricity Tariff mentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…As a crucial component in the hydrosphere, groundwater plays an important role in water balance, widely affecting many water systems such as urban domestic water (Kuroda, K., and Fukushi, 2008), industrial water (Foster, and Chilton, 2003), agricultural irrigation water (Garduño, and Foster, S., 2010). However, groundwater pollution caused by contaminants migration (Postigo, et al, 2018), percolation of liquid sprayed over land (Beckett, 1993), or inter-aquifer leakage (Nyer, 1992), has become a serious threat to the safety of groundwater systems.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%