Can Participatory Groundwater Management Enhance Drought Resilience? The Case of the Andhra Pradesh Farmer-Managed Groundwater Systems Project

This paper investigates whether the proactive involvement of local communities in the management of groundwater can help build drought resilience, using the case of the Andhra Pradesh (AP) Farmer Managed Groundwater Systems (APFAMGS) project as an...

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Main Authors: Reddy, V. Ratna, Reddy, M. Srinivasa
Format: Brief
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/479511579804284753/Can-Participatory-Groundwater-Management-Enhance-Drought-Resilience-The-Case-of-the-Andhra-Pradesh-Farmer-Managed-Groundwater-Systems-Project
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/33243
id okr-10986-33243
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-332432021-09-16T20:39:21Z Can Participatory Groundwater Management Enhance Drought Resilience? The Case of the Andhra Pradesh Farmer-Managed Groundwater Systems Project Reddy, V. Ratna Reddy, M. Srinivasa GROUNDWATER STAKEHOLDER ENGAGEMENT PARTICIPATORY GOVERNMENT DROUGHT DROUGHT RESILIENCE IRRIGATION WATER USE This paper investigates whether the proactive involvement of local communities in the management of groundwater can help build drought resilience, using the case of the Andhra Pradesh (AP) Farmer Managed Groundwater Systems (APFAMGS) project as an example. The 18-year project was implemented through seven districts of India’s AP and Telangana states. During this period, participatory groundwater management (PGM) initiatives evolved from a focus on demand management to an emphasis on drought adaptation as links between groundwater and climate variability became increasingly conspicuous. This paper is based on a review of existing studies, field visits to the region, and interactions with communities and individual farmers. The objective of APFAMGS was to promote sustainable groundwater management by creating community awareness through training, water planning, and alternative cropping choices. The study concludes that PGM, as adopted in APFAMGS, has a limited impact on groundwater levels in hard rock areas under conditions of marginally decreasing rainfall, greatly increasing net abstraction, and groundwater dependency. However, the project improved awareness that helped communities adapt to drought. The conclusion is that to be effective in addressing drought vulnerabilities, PGM must include policy interventions that encompass incentive and regulatory mechanisms, and village-based institutions must be linked to government departments that manage groundwater. 2020-01-27T19:18:44Z 2020-01-27T19:18:44Z 2020-01 Brief http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/479511579804284753/Can-Participatory-Groundwater-Management-Enhance-Drought-Resilience-The-Case-of-the-Andhra-Pradesh-Farmer-Managed-Groundwater-Systems-Project W19069 http://hdl.handle.net/10986/33243 English Water Knowledge Note; CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Publications & Research :: Brief Publications & Research 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
topic GROUNDWATER
STAKEHOLDER ENGAGEMENT
PARTICIPATORY GOVERNMENT
DROUGHT
DROUGHT RESILIENCE
IRRIGATION
WATER USE
spellingShingle GROUNDWATER
STAKEHOLDER ENGAGEMENT
PARTICIPATORY GOVERNMENT
DROUGHT
DROUGHT RESILIENCE
IRRIGATION
WATER USE
Reddy, V. Ratna
Reddy, M. Srinivasa
Can Participatory Groundwater Management Enhance Drought Resilience? The Case of the Andhra Pradesh Farmer-Managed Groundwater Systems Project
geographic_facet South Asia
India
relation Water Knowledge Note;
description This paper investigates whether the proactive involvement of local communities in the management of groundwater can help build drought resilience, using the case of the Andhra Pradesh (AP) Farmer Managed Groundwater Systems (APFAMGS) project as an example. The 18-year project was implemented through seven districts of India’s AP and Telangana states. During this period, participatory groundwater management (PGM) initiatives evolved from a focus on demand management to an emphasis on drought adaptation as links between groundwater and climate variability became increasingly conspicuous. This paper is based on a review of existing studies, field visits to the region, and interactions with communities and individual farmers. The objective of APFAMGS was to promote sustainable groundwater management by creating community awareness through training, water planning, and alternative cropping choices. The study concludes that PGM, as adopted in APFAMGS, has a limited impact on groundwater levels in hard rock areas under conditions of marginally decreasing rainfall, greatly increasing net abstraction, and groundwater dependency. However, the project improved awareness that helped communities adapt to drought. The conclusion is that to be effective in addressing drought vulnerabilities, PGM must include policy interventions that encompass incentive and regulatory mechanisms, and village-based institutions must be linked to government departments that manage groundwater.
format Brief
author Reddy, V. Ratna
Reddy, M. Srinivasa
author_facet Reddy, V. Ratna
Reddy, M. Srinivasa
author_sort Reddy, V. Ratna
title Can Participatory Groundwater Management Enhance Drought Resilience? The Case of the Andhra Pradesh Farmer-Managed Groundwater Systems Project
title_short Can Participatory Groundwater Management Enhance Drought Resilience? The Case of the Andhra Pradesh Farmer-Managed Groundwater Systems Project
title_full Can Participatory Groundwater Management Enhance Drought Resilience? The Case of the Andhra Pradesh Farmer-Managed Groundwater Systems Project
title_fullStr Can Participatory Groundwater Management Enhance Drought Resilience? The Case of the Andhra Pradesh Farmer-Managed Groundwater Systems Project
title_full_unstemmed Can Participatory Groundwater Management Enhance Drought Resilience? The Case of the Andhra Pradesh Farmer-Managed Groundwater Systems Project
title_sort can participatory groundwater management enhance drought resilience? the case of the andhra pradesh farmer-managed groundwater systems project
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2020
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/479511579804284753/Can-Participatory-Groundwater-Management-Enhance-Drought-Resilience-The-Case-of-the-Andhra-Pradesh-Farmer-Managed-Groundwater-Systems-Project
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/33243
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