


Groundwater resources
are facing a serious threat in the dry areas of WANA. Wells are drying up,
aquifers are being polluted, and extraction costs are rising. More sustainable
use of water is required to safeguard the future of agriculture and the communities
who depend on it. The most pressing challenge is to implement sustainable
and efficient management of groundwater in order to deal with the growing
problem of water scarcity. In an effort to identify major areas of concern,
researchers at ICARDA investigated several aspects of water use:
Allocation of water between different crops and seasons
Reasons for
groundwater exploitation and how these relate to crop profitability and water
productivity
Institutions concerned
with groundwater
Needs of stakeholders


Researchers discovered that groundwater has been depleted as a result of increased support for agricultural activity, unrestricted access to water, and introduction of improved drilling and pumping technologies. As it has become more profitable, irrigated agriculture has expanded and farmers have pumped more and more water from aquifers (Fig. 21). Unfortunately, as more farmers have turned to irrigation, wells have dried up and water tables have fallen. If these trends continue, farm incomes and rural employment will be badly affected and migration from rural to urban areas will accelerate. However, the farmers response to depleted groundwater has been to search further by drilling more and deeper wells. The farmers have been slow to adopt water-saving technologies and introduce water-efficient crops.
Despite the overall problem
of water scarcity, farmers who had sufficient water consistently over-irrigated
their winter and summer crops, applying up to 62% more water than was needed.
However, during the critical growth stages (April for wheat and July for cotton),
they were not applying enough water. Lack of water in the drier villages (zone
4) meant that summer crops were not irrigated and the farmers incurred substantial
financial losses. The gross profit margins of wheat and cotton fell as rainfall
decreased and the worsening groundwater situation led to higher irrigation
costs (Table 17). Farmers who tried to grow cotton in zones of unreliable
water either abandoned the crop completely or achieved only a low gross margin.


The workshops, attended
by researchers, farmers, well drillers, and officials concerned with groundwater,
were a major success as stakeholders were able to meet for the first time
on common ground. The officials tried to discourage the drilling of new wells,
but the farmers, while showing their awareness of the problem, asked for alternative
solutions. They wanted to learn more about modern irrigation systems and improve
their water-use efficiency, but were unaware of existing government programs
offering credit facilities to enhance adoption of new technologies.
Although public awareness of the groundwater problem is growing and several policy measures (more stringent control of drilling, restricting crops with high water requirements in water-scarce areas, and registration of wells) have been taken, further research is needed to determine the full range of possible options and their potential impacts.