1 / 16

Indigenous Irrigation Organisation in South Bihar.

Indigenous Irrigation Organisation in South Bihar. Presented by: Ranjan Kumar Mishra(36) Vivek Kumar(60). Different methods of irrigation :. Canal Pond Dams Wells Sprinkler Drip Others. Ahar and Pynes. Ahars:- Reservoir Major embankment across the line of the drainage.

khoi
Télécharger la présentation

Indigenous Irrigation Organisation in South Bihar.

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Indigenous Irrigation Organisation in South Bihar. Presented by: Ranjan Kumar Mishra(36) Vivek Kumar(60)

  2. Different methods of irrigation: • Canal • Pond • Dams • Wells • Sprinkler • Drip • Others .

  3. Ahar and Pynes Ahars:- • Reservoir • Major embankment across the line of the drainage. • Two sides of embankments running backwards up to the line of the drainage gradually losing their heights because of the gradient of the surface.

  4. Ahar and Pynes • Pyne is the local name for the diversion channels . • Pynes are artificial channels constructed to utilise river water in agricultural fields. • Most Pynes flow within 10 km of a river and their length is not more than 20 km.

  5. Ahar and Pynes

  6. Ahar and Pynes • During first two decades in Bihar :- • 35% of 2.5 mha of cropped land was irrigated by this system. • 3% of 3 mha in north Bihar. • Now :- • Today the area irrigated is 12% of all irrigated sources.

  7. Reasons of decline • Abolition of the Zamindari system. • A large number of alternatives in the form of new canal schemes and tube wells.

  8. Distribution of water. • Equitable distribution of water. • Water is first stored in the Ahars. • Excess of water which is available is equally distributed. • At the time of scarcity, water is distributed from the Ahars.

  9. People’s Participation • In making the pynes before irrigating. • Maintaining the pynes during the irrigation. • Desilting the pynes and the ahar. • For operational works and vigilance.

  10. Case of village SABATO.

  11. Case of village SABATO. • Two land rights activists, Members of the Institute for Research and Action (IRA). Sarita and Mahesh Kant, were brutally killed on 24 January 2004 in Gaya, Bihar State . • Sarita and Mahesh mobilized the community of Fatehpur to revive an old 45-km canal system on the Bihar-Jharkhand border.

  12. Cost and Sustainability • Quiet low. • Rs 500 to Rs 1000 as compared to Rs 5000 for canal irrigation. • Local materials used in making the embankments. • Exists since centuries as it uses the excess water also. • Mode of storage helps in preventing the flood.

  13. Advantages • Mobilisation of local resources. • Utilising human resources. • Cost is quiet low. • Utilises the rain water which would have otherwise gone waste. • Could be more advantageous if integrated with new diversion schemes.

  14. References: • 1. Sengupta, N. 1991. “Traditional type of organization” in Managing Common Property, SAGE Publishers, New Delhi /Newbury Park/ London: 107-109. • 2. Sengupta, N. 1993. "Storage Works" in User-Friendly Irrigation Designs, • SAGE Publishers, New Delhi /Newbury Park/ London: 46-47, 88,132. • 3. Sengupta, N. 1996. "The Indigenous Irrigation Organisation in South Bihar" in B.C. Barah (ed), Traditional Water Harvesting Systems - An Ecological Economic Survey, New Age International Publishers, New Delhi: 175.

  15. Google References: • 1. Tanner, E.L. 1919. Final Report on the Survey and Settlement Operations in the District of Gaya, 1911-1918. Bihar and Orissa Government, Patna. • 2. Water Harvesting Systems: Traditional Systems. www.rainwaterharvesting.org. • 3.www.indiawaterportal.org/arghyam/rainwaterharvesting.htm. • 4.www.actionaid.org/asia/355_2_514.html -

  16. Thank You

More Related