India : Power Supply to Agriculture, Volume 2. Haryana Case Study

After almost a decade of high-level effort to bring the charges (tariffs) that farmers pay for electricity more nearly into line with the costs of supply, India has barely made a dent in the longstanding and increasingly uneconomical practice of su...

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Main Author: World Bank
Language:English
en_US
Published: Washington, DC 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2001/06/2378796/india-power-supply-agriculture-vol-2-4-haryana-case-study
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/15285
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spelling okr-10986-152852021-04-23T14:03:15Z India : Power Supply to Agriculture, Volume 2. Haryana Case Study World Bank POWER SUPPLY SYSTEMS CASE STUDIES AGRICULTURAL ENERGY CONSUMPTION ELECTRIC POWER POWER DISTRIBUTION AVAILABILITY RELIABILITY PUMPING STATIONS FARMER MANAGEMENT OF IRRIGATION SYSTEMS TECHNOLOGY DEVELOPMENT AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTIVITY FARM INCOME WILLINGNESS TO PAY POWER SECTOR REFORM POWER GENERATING SYSTEMS ELECTRICITY PRICING ENERGY LOSS AGRICULTURAL INVESTMENTS AGRICULTURAL SUBSIDIES OPPORTUNITY COSTS SERVICE QUALITY AGRICULTURAL CONSUMERS AGRICULTURAL GROWTH AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTION AGRICULTURE CANAL IRRIGATION CANALS COTTON CROP CROPPING CROPPING INTENSITY CROPPING PATTERNS CROPPING SEASONS CROPS CULTIVATED AREA CULTIVATION ELECTRICITY CONSUMPTION EQUIPMENT FARM FARM HOUSEHOLDS FARM INCOME FARM INCOMES FARMER FARMERS FARMING FARMS FOOD SECURITY GRAIN GRAIN PRODUCTION GROUNDWATER GROUNDWATER RESOURCES IRRIGATION PURPOSES MARGINAL FARMERS PADDY POWER STATIONS PRODUCTION ACTIVITIES PUMPING PUMPS RAINFALL RICE RURAL EMPLOYMENT SMALL FARMERS WATER MARKETS WATER QUALITY WATER TABLE WHEAT YIELDS After almost a decade of high-level effort to bring the charges (tariffs) that farmers pay for electricity more nearly into line with the costs of supply, India has barely made a dent in the longstanding and increasingly uneconomical practice of subsidizing power to agricultural consumers for irrigation. Progress has been slowed by the understandable but misplaced concern that higher tariffs would harm farmers--and that the injured parties would take political revenge on the reformers. This study seeks to dispel that anxiety. It is the result of a joint effort by the Bank and the states of Haryana and Adhra Pradesh , both of which have begun raising the price of electriicity to agriculture. Its central contribution to policy discussion is the detail in which it documents the costs--ususally neither acknowledged nor clearly defined--to farmers in those states of subsidies that actually harm agricultural operations more than they help as well as the benefits that the farmers would get from improved quality of electricity services. The costs--in power outages, damaged pumping equipment, irrigation foregone because of power losses, distorted investment patterns, among others--exact a heavy toll from ordinary farmers. In the form of deficits, the subsidies also sap state budgets of funds that could otherwise be invested in rural infrastructure, extension services, and advanced agricultural technology. As unrecovered costs, they starve suppliers of funds for maintenance and improved service. On the other side of the coin lie the benefits that reliable flows of power and good quality of other electricity services could deliver to rural India. 2013-08-21T21:25:52Z 2013-08-21T21:25:52Z 2001-06-15 http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2001/06/2378796/india-power-supply-agriculture-vol-2-4-haryana-case-study http://hdl.handle.net/10986/15285 English en_US CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ World Bank Washington, DC South Asia India
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
en_US
topic POWER SUPPLY SYSTEMS
CASE STUDIES
AGRICULTURAL ENERGY CONSUMPTION
ELECTRIC POWER
POWER DISTRIBUTION
AVAILABILITY
RELIABILITY
PUMPING STATIONS
FARMER MANAGEMENT OF IRRIGATION SYSTEMS
TECHNOLOGY DEVELOPMENT
AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTIVITY
FARM INCOME
WILLINGNESS TO PAY
POWER SECTOR REFORM
POWER GENERATING SYSTEMS
ELECTRICITY PRICING
ENERGY LOSS
AGRICULTURAL INVESTMENTS
AGRICULTURAL SUBSIDIES
OPPORTUNITY COSTS
SERVICE QUALITY AGRICULTURAL CONSUMERS
AGRICULTURAL GROWTH
AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTION
AGRICULTURE
CANAL IRRIGATION
CANALS
COTTON
CROP
CROPPING
CROPPING INTENSITY
CROPPING PATTERNS
CROPPING SEASONS
CROPS
CULTIVATED AREA
CULTIVATION
ELECTRICITY CONSUMPTION
EQUIPMENT
FARM
FARM HOUSEHOLDS
FARM INCOME
FARM INCOMES
FARMER
FARMERS
FARMING
FARMS
FOOD SECURITY
GRAIN
GRAIN PRODUCTION
GROUNDWATER
GROUNDWATER RESOURCES
IRRIGATION PURPOSES
MARGINAL FARMERS
PADDY
POWER STATIONS
PRODUCTION ACTIVITIES
PUMPING
PUMPS
RAINFALL
RICE
RURAL EMPLOYMENT
SMALL FARMERS
WATER MARKETS
WATER QUALITY
WATER TABLE
WHEAT
YIELDS
spellingShingle POWER SUPPLY SYSTEMS
CASE STUDIES
AGRICULTURAL ENERGY CONSUMPTION
ELECTRIC POWER
POWER DISTRIBUTION
AVAILABILITY
RELIABILITY
PUMPING STATIONS
FARMER MANAGEMENT OF IRRIGATION SYSTEMS
TECHNOLOGY DEVELOPMENT
AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTIVITY
FARM INCOME
WILLINGNESS TO PAY
POWER SECTOR REFORM
POWER GENERATING SYSTEMS
ELECTRICITY PRICING
ENERGY LOSS
AGRICULTURAL INVESTMENTS
AGRICULTURAL SUBSIDIES
OPPORTUNITY COSTS
SERVICE QUALITY AGRICULTURAL CONSUMERS
AGRICULTURAL GROWTH
AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTION
AGRICULTURE
CANAL IRRIGATION
CANALS
COTTON
CROP
CROPPING
CROPPING INTENSITY
CROPPING PATTERNS
CROPPING SEASONS
CROPS
CULTIVATED AREA
CULTIVATION
ELECTRICITY CONSUMPTION
EQUIPMENT
FARM
FARM HOUSEHOLDS
FARM INCOME
FARM INCOMES
FARMER
FARMERS
FARMING
FARMS
FOOD SECURITY
GRAIN
GRAIN PRODUCTION
GROUNDWATER
GROUNDWATER RESOURCES
IRRIGATION PURPOSES
MARGINAL FARMERS
PADDY
POWER STATIONS
PRODUCTION ACTIVITIES
PUMPING
PUMPS
RAINFALL
RICE
RURAL EMPLOYMENT
SMALL FARMERS
WATER MARKETS
WATER QUALITY
WATER TABLE
WHEAT
YIELDS
World Bank
India : Power Supply to Agriculture, Volume 2. Haryana Case Study
geographic_facet South Asia
India
description After almost a decade of high-level effort to bring the charges (tariffs) that farmers pay for electricity more nearly into line with the costs of supply, India has barely made a dent in the longstanding and increasingly uneconomical practice of subsidizing power to agricultural consumers for irrigation. Progress has been slowed by the understandable but misplaced concern that higher tariffs would harm farmers--and that the injured parties would take political revenge on the reformers. This study seeks to dispel that anxiety. It is the result of a joint effort by the Bank and the states of Haryana and Adhra Pradesh , both of which have begun raising the price of electriicity to agriculture. Its central contribution to policy discussion is the detail in which it documents the costs--ususally neither acknowledged nor clearly defined--to farmers in those states of subsidies that actually harm agricultural operations more than they help as well as the benefits that the farmers would get from improved quality of electricity services. The costs--in power outages, damaged pumping equipment, irrigation foregone because of power losses, distorted investment patterns, among others--exact a heavy toll from ordinary farmers. In the form of deficits, the subsidies also sap state budgets of funds that could otherwise be invested in rural infrastructure, extension services, and advanced agricultural technology. As unrecovered costs, they starve suppliers of funds for maintenance and improved service. On the other side of the coin lie the benefits that reliable flows of power and good quality of other electricity services could deliver to rural India.
author World Bank
author_facet World Bank
author_sort World Bank
title India : Power Supply to Agriculture, Volume 2. Haryana Case Study
title_short India : Power Supply to Agriculture, Volume 2. Haryana Case Study
title_full India : Power Supply to Agriculture, Volume 2. Haryana Case Study
title_fullStr India : Power Supply to Agriculture, Volume 2. Haryana Case Study
title_full_unstemmed India : Power Supply to Agriculture, Volume 2. Haryana Case Study
title_sort india : power supply to agriculture, volume 2. haryana case study
publisher Washington, DC
publishDate 2013
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2001/06/2378796/india-power-supply-agriculture-vol-2-4-haryana-case-study
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/15285
_version_ 1764427363771219968