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Drip Irrigation: Can Pakistan Make its Deserts Bloom?

RiazHaq

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https://www.southasiainvestor.com/2019/06/drip-irrigation-can-pakistan-make-its.html
Large tracts of desert in Cholistan, Kharan and Thar land lay barren in Pakistan today. Can some parts of these deserts be made to bloom given the worsening water crisis in the country with per capita water availability approaching 900 cubic meters? How does Pakistan improve long term food security for its growing population? The answer to both lies in efficient water management through effective drip irrigation.


Drip Irrigation

What is Drip Irrigation:

Drip irrigation is a micro-irrigation system using tubing that saves water and nutrients by allowing water to drip slowly into the roots of plants, either from above the soil surface or buried below the surface. It puts water directly into the roots and minimizes evaporation.

Water mixed with fertilizer is carried out through tubes which release a small amounts of water per minute directly to the roots of each plant. Precision watering cuts evaporation, run off, and waste.

More Crop Per Drop:

"More crop per drop" program focuses on improving water use efficiency by promoting drip and sprinkler irrigation in agriculture in Pakistan.

The Punjab government started this effort with the World Bank with $250 million investment. The World Bank is now providing additional $130 million financing for the Punjab Irrigated Agriculture Productivity Improvement Program Phase-I.

The project is the Punjab Government's initiative called High-Efficiency Irrigation Systems (HEIS) to more than doubles the efficiency of water use. Under the project, drip irrigation systems have been installed on about 26,000 acres, and 5,000 laser leveling units have been provided. The additional financing will ensure completion of 120,000 acres with ponds in saline areas and for rainwater harvesting, and filtration systems for drinking water where possible, according to the World Bank.

Cost of Drip Irrigation System:

Most crops are not irrigated with the drip method due to higher costs. In the United States and Spain, where the technology is used most, it comprises 6.75 and 2.75 percent of the total irrigated area, respectively, according to the International Commission on Irrigation and Drainage. Farmers are offered subsidies to encourage the use of drip irrigation in most countries as a way of conserving precious water.

Subsidies in Punjab, Pakistan:

Punjab provincial government is subsidizing up to 60% of the cost of installing new drip irrigation systems, according to Business Recorder newspaper. Director General Agriculture (Water Management) Malik Muhammad Akram said that latest irrigation techniques ensure availability of water and fertilizer in time to the plants and it also ensure uniform supply of these two major ingredients to all the plants in a field. It helps attaining more per acre yield with minimum agricultural inputs, he added, according to the paper.

Using drip irrigation, farmers can save up to 95% of water and reduce fertilizer use, compared to surface irrigation, according to Malik Mohammad Akram. In flood irrigation – the traditional method of agriculture in the region – a farmer uses 412,000 liters per acre, while using drip irrigation the same land can be irrigated with just 232,000 liters of water, he explained to Zofeen Ibrahim of The Third Pole that covers Asia's water crisis.

Success Stories:

Writing for The Third Pole, Zofeen Ibrahim has cited a couple of success stories of farmers receiving Punjab government's drip irrigation subsidies: The stories of ex IT Engineer Hasan Abdullah and Infiniti Agro and Livestock Farm.

Hasan Abdulla is has planted an orchard on his 40-acre plot in Cholistan Desert. He has orange, lemon olive trees which are now fruiting three years after planting. He is among the first farmers experimenting with drip irrigation.While Abdullah was saving water, the cost of diesel for running water pump was proving astronomical. It would have been difficult for Abdullah to continue farming with drip irrigation had the government not announced an 80% subsidy on solar power plants for farmers in 2018. He promptly took it up.

Asif Riaz Taj, who manages Infiniti Agro and Livestock Farm in Bahawalpur, heard of Abdulla's drip irrigation project and paid him a visit. He like it and decided to follow the example. Now in their fourth year, the Infiniti orchards have started fruiting over 70 acres. But it will not be before its sixth year, Taj said, that they will “break even”. The drip irrigation and solar plant was installed at a cost of PKR 25 million (USD 174,000), and the monthly running cost of this farm is almost PKR 4 million (USD 28,000).

Summary:

Pakistan faces a severe water crisis that threatens the nation's long term food security. The country needs to expand area under cultivation while efficiently managing its precious water resources. It needs to make parts of its deserts bloom. The best way to do it efficient water management through effective drip irrigation. Such projects are expensive to implement. The Punjab government is offering up to 60% subsidy to farmers to encourage wider use of drip irrigation.

Related Links:

Haq's Musings

South Asia Investor Review

Pakistan Water Crisis: Facts and Myths

Groundwater Depletion in Pakistan

Water Scarce Pakistan

Cycles of Drought and Floods in Pakistan

Pakistan to Build Massive Dams

Dust Bowl in Thar Desert Region

Dasht River in Balochistan

Hindus in Pakistan

Riaz Haq's YouTube Channel

PakAlumni Social Network


https://www.southasiainvestor.com/2019/06/drip-irrigation-can-pakistan-make-its.html
 
Iam sure if we study it enough, we can make cheaper methods of producing the facilities. All it takes is the will to move from the old to the new. If Pakistan makes its agricultural industry advanced with modren technology, then thay would surely be a blessed day.
 
Pakistan has better water storage than even india i recently read...lot of farmers in india use this drip system of irrigation...there is no shortage of water in india...all the water we get though heavy rains just run out to sea...just a recent report in my village says all my villages water needs and the near by big towns water needs are easily met if all the lakes and ponds in the region are removed of silt and they reach their full capacity for collecting rain water.
 
Drip Irrigation is one part of the equation. Its good for trees put not for bulk crops like wheat. Low pressure sprinklers, dams, storage, and waste water recycling all need to be combined. The vid below is good plan.

 
Also, treated waste water from cities can be used for irrigation purposes. our cities produce a whole of waste water, why not use it?
 
Pakistan has better water storage than even india i recently read...lot of farmers in india use this drip system of irrigation...there is no shortage of water in india...all the water we get though heavy rains just run out to sea...just a recent report in my village says all my villages water needs and the near by big towns water needs are easily met if all the lakes and ponds in the region are removed of silt and they reach their full capacity for collecting rain water.
The system itself is imported from india.

Jain agri is a company supplying pumps etc while solar panels and pipes are from China.

A fukall situation, where these systems are/were imported or installed at excessive costs involving private Pakistani companies by the govt (initiative started by previous govt).

This itself prolly made alot of people rich.
 
A fukall situation, where these systems are/were imported or installed at excessive costs involving private Pakistani companies by the govt (initiative started by previous govt).

This itself prolly made alot of people rich.

A perennial disease which is not so uncommon in the region...this chaltha hai attitude needs to change...grease some palms get the work done quickly...having said that...talk is easy...i myself am a very corrupt fellow if i am brutally honest...they ask bribe from me i quietly pay than confront...i cant afford the time to fight with these guys...take them to court etc...my profession is like that...my priority is to put food on the families table...what to do ? :coffee:
 
The system itself is imported from india.

Jain agri is a company supplying pumps etc while solar panels and pipes are from China.

A fukall situation, where these systems are/were imported or installed at excessive costs involving private Pakistani companies by the govt (initiative started by previous govt).

This itself prolly made alot of people rich.
Punjab and Sindh could triple their production and slash expenses in half if drop irrigation is adapted
Flood irrigation just isnt going to work in this century
 
Also, treated waste water from cities can be used for irrigation purposes. our cities produce a whole of waste water, why not use it?
Waste water recycling should be used for industrial, lawn and park irrigation, and growing animal fodder or Bio fuels. Only Isreal uses it to grow crops. There is a yuck factor.

The system itself is imported from india.

Jain agri is a company supplying pumps etc while solar panels and pipes are from China.

A fukall situation, where these systems are/were imported or installed at excessive costs involving private Pakistani companies by the govt (initiative started by previous govt).

This itself prolly made alot of people rich.
Many global suppliers. Tech is not new.
 
its only feasible if we start manufacturing pipes and other drip equipments in Pakistan right now its really expensive
 
Pakistan flushes 95% of it's water in sea ever year , if we retain such water for 1-2 years, in Artificial Lakes , sure we can irrigate Farms in deserted areas

Without Storage capacity , the talk of Irrigation is futile

Storage Capacity x Dreamy Ideas = Result
(0 x 100) = 0


Recycled water from sewage is 95% naturally clean and can be used to irrigate city plantation and gardens (Cough Cough we don't do none of it )

large-man-made-lake.jpg
 
Last edited:
Drip irrigation requires constant supply of water.. A reliable source i. E.
The key to that is small dams across balochistan, upper punjab and KPK. Rainwater can be harvested leading to water for the next crop and it wud inadvertently raise the ground waterlevel as well.
Same way we need a few artificial lakes in southern punjab... Just to store flood or rainwater in sutlej or water during excessive rains and raise the ground level.

Drip irrigation will surely transform the agricultural sector but we need lottssss of homework before setting off on the route.
 
Before my last ban i informed the forum that Pakistanis will be forced towards this because gormint cannot build bigger dams.

tsk tsk tsk
 
https://www.southasiainvestor.com/2019/06/drip-irrigation-can-pakistan-make-its.html
Large tracts of desert in Cholistan, Kharan and Thar land lay barren in Pakistan today. Can some parts of these deserts be made to bloom given the worsening water crisis in the country with per capita water availability approaching 900 cubic meters? How does Pakistan improve long term food security for its growing population? The answer to both lies in efficient water management through effective drip irrigation.


Drip Irrigation

What is Drip Irrigation:

Drip irrigation is a micro-irrigation system using tubing that saves water and nutrients by allowing water to drip slowly into the roots of plants, either from above the soil surface or buried below the surface. It puts water directly into the roots and minimizes evaporation.

Water mixed with fertilizer is carried out through tubes which release a small amounts of water per minute directly to the roots of each plant. Precision watering cuts evaporation, run off, and waste.

More Crop Per Drop:

"More crop per drop" program focuses on improving water use efficiency by promoting drip and sprinkler irrigation in agriculture in Pakistan.

The Punjab government started this effort with the World Bank with $250 million investment. The World Bank is now providing additional $130 million financing for the Punjab Irrigated Agriculture Productivity Improvement Program Phase-I.

The project is the Punjab Government's initiative called High-Efficiency Irrigation Systems (HEIS) to more than doubles the efficiency of water use. Under the project, drip irrigation systems have been installed on about 26,000 acres, and 5,000 laser leveling units have been provided. The additional financing will ensure completion of 120,000 acres with ponds in saline areas and for rainwater harvesting, and filtration systems for drinking water where possible, according to the World Bank.

Cost of Drip Irrigation System:

Most crops are not irrigated with the drip method due to higher costs. In the United States and Spain, where the technology is used most, it comprises 6.75 and 2.75 percent of the total irrigated area, respectively, according to the International Commission on Irrigation and Drainage. Farmers are offered subsidies to encourage the use of drip irrigation in most countries as a way of conserving precious water.

Subsidies in Punjab, Pakistan:

Punjab provincial government is subsidizing up to 60% of the cost of installing new drip irrigation systems, according to Business Recorder newspaper. Director General Agriculture (Water Management) Malik Muhammad Akram said that latest irrigation techniques ensure availability of water and fertilizer in time to the plants and it also ensure uniform supply of these two major ingredients to all the plants in a field. It helps attaining more per acre yield with minimum agricultural inputs, he added, according to the paper.

Using drip irrigation, farmers can save up to 95% of water and reduce fertilizer use, compared to surface irrigation, according to Malik Mohammad Akram. In flood irrigation – the traditional method of agriculture in the region – a farmer uses 412,000 liters per acre, while using drip irrigation the same land can be irrigated with just 232,000 liters of water, he explained to Zofeen Ibrahim of The Third Pole that covers Asia's water crisis.

Success Stories:

Writing for The Third Pole, Zofeen Ibrahim has cited a couple of success stories of farmers receiving Punjab government's drip irrigation subsidies: The stories of ex IT Engineer Hasan Abdullah and Infiniti Agro and Livestock Farm.

Hasan Abdulla is has planted an orchard on his 40-acre plot in Cholistan Desert. He has orange, lemon olive trees which are now fruiting three years after planting. He is among the first farmers experimenting with drip irrigation.While Abdullah was saving water, the cost of diesel for running water pump was proving astronomical. It would have been difficult for Abdullah to continue farming with drip irrigation had the government not announced an 80% subsidy on solar power plants for farmers in 2018. He promptly took it up.

Asif Riaz Taj, who manages Infiniti Agro and Livestock Farm in Bahawalpur, heard of Abdulla's drip irrigation project and paid him a visit. He like it and decided to follow the example. Now in their fourth year, the Infiniti orchards have started fruiting over 70 acres. But it will not be before its sixth year, Taj said, that they will “break even”. The drip irrigation and solar plant was installed at a cost of PKR 25 million (USD 174,000), and the monthly running cost of this farm is almost PKR 4 million (USD 28,000).

Summary:

Pakistan faces a severe water crisis that threatens the nation's long term food security. The country needs to expand area under cultivation while efficiently managing its precious water resources. It needs to make parts of its deserts bloom. The best way to do it efficient water management through effective drip irrigation. Such projects are expensive to implement. The Punjab government is offering up to 60% subsidy to farmers to encourage wider use of drip irrigation.

Related Links:

Haq's Musings

South Asia Investor Review

Pakistan Water Crisis: Facts and Myths

Groundwater Depletion in Pakistan

Water Scarce Pakistan

Cycles of Drought and Floods in Pakistan

Pakistan to Build Massive Dams

Dust Bowl in Thar Desert Region

Dasht River in Balochistan

Hindus in Pakistan

Riaz Haq's YouTube Channel

PakAlumni Social Network


https://www.southasiainvestor.com/2019/06/drip-irrigation-can-pakistan-make-its.html
What happened to the millions of acre land which is not barren, now going after the desert!!!
 
Drip irrigation was perfected by the zionist state of israel which Pakistan hates and does not recognize. So it is not halal and therefore unsuitable for our paak muslim farmers.
 
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