Understanding Unsustainable Irrigation Practices in a Regionally Contested Large River Basin in Peninsular India Through the Lens of the Water–Energy–Food–Environment (WEFE) Nexus
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- Map the factors influencing groundwater and energy use in irrigated agriculture.
- Quantify the spatial distribution of the energy consumed for groundwater pumping.
- Estimate the environmental impact of irrigation-related energy use, using carbon emissions as an indicator.
2. Study Area
2.1. Cauvery River Basin
2.2. Water Resources Development
2.3. Geopolitical Context
3. Methods and Data
3.1. Methodology
3.2. Data
- i
- Farmer status data—We classified district-wide pumpset ownership data by farmer type according to their economic status in the agriculture census [39]. These data were aggregated for the whole basin and used to analyse the relationships between irrigation sources, access to groundwater pumping equipment, farmers’ economic status, and farm size.
- ii
- Groundwater table data—We obtained groundwater table data from the Central Groundwater Board (CGWB) portal (India-WRIS) [33] for all observation wells in basin districts from 1996 to 2016. Since the number of wells increased annually and seasonal data gaps were common, we calculated district-level averages to analyse 20-year groundwater trends. To approximate missing values, we used observations from the previous or following year for the same season.
- iii
- Rice Production data—We obtained district-scale rice production data from the National Agriculture Statistics archives [39] for the years 1997–2014 to estimate the correlation between rice production and groundwater availability.
- iv
- Minor irrigation data—We obtained village-wise groundwater irrigation data for the year 2013–14 from the Minor Irrigation (MI) Census database, available through the Indian Statistical Data Dissemination Portal. This dataset included information on groundwater irrigation structures such as deep, medium and, shallow tube wells, dug wells, and minor surface water irrigation systems including surface-lift pumps and surface flow schemes. For each MI structure type, the dataset provided the number of structures, their operational status, average daily pumping hours during Rabi and Kharif seasons, the distribution of structures by pump horsepower, energy sources, and water distribution system (Table 1). The data were manually resampled for villages within the basin boundary and converted to geospatial format by joining tabular data with village shapefiles in ArcGIS 10.6 software.
- v
- Major and medium irrigation projects—We obtained data on the area of major and medium irrigation projects from India-WRIS web-map services [33]. To analyse the correlation between groundwater pumping and the availability of surface irrigation sources, we manually digitised the command areas of these projects in ArcGIS software.
3.3. Estimating Energy Consumption and Groundwater Productivity of Pumps
4. Results
4.1. Spatial Mapping of Irrigation Regimes
4.1.1. Density of Minor Irrigation Pumpsets
4.1.2. Seasonality of Pumpset Use
4.2. Drivers Influencing Water–Energy Dynamics in Irrigation Sector
4.2.1. Sources of Energy for Irrigation Pumps
4.2.2. Deepening Borewells and Groundwater Level
4.2.3. Competition for Water and Crop Production
4.3. Spatial Analysis of Estimated Energy Consumption
4.3.1. Verification of Estimated Energy Consumption
4.3.2. Energy Consumption in Irrigated Agriculture
4.3.3. Estimating Groundwater Withdrawal
5. Discussion
5.1. The Nexus in Irrigated Agriculture
5.2. Challenges and Uncertainties in the Nexus
5.3. Limitations of This Study
6. Conclusions
- Accelerating the adoption of water-efficient irrigation methods by promoting drip irrigation and rainwater harvesting.
- Reforming electricity subsidies to reduce energy consumption while maintaining support for farmers.
- Strengthening water governance by improving inter-state water-sharing agreements and promoting integrated basin-level management.
- Investing in data-driven decision-making by building a robust data.
- Empowering farmers by providing financial and technical support for adopting sustainable agricultural practices.
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Data | Spatial scale | Period | Used for | Source |
---|---|---|---|---|
Number of pumpsets under different irrigation sources | Village scale | 2013–2014 | Spatial mapping of irrigation systems and estimating energy consumed | [36] |
Rice production | District scale | 1997–2014 | Estimating correlation between rice production and groundwater availability | [39] |
Groundwater table | CGWB borewells | 1997–2014 | Estimating correlation between rice production and groundwater availability, estimating groundwater abstraction | [33] |
Hours of pumping and pump horsepower | Village scale | 2013–2014 | Estimating energy consumed | [36] |
Irrigation potential under different irrigation sources and water distribution methods | Village scale | 2013–2014 | Estimating irrigation efficiency | [36] |
Pumpsets under different sources of energy and depth of borewells | Village scale | 2013–2014 | Spatial mapping of irrigation systems | [36] |
Pumpset efficiency of 30% | - | - | Estimating groundwater abstraction | [3] |
Irrigation source per farmers’ economic class | District scale | 2014 | Assessing economic factor in access to irrigation equipment | [39] |
Pumping Hours/Day (Kharif) | Pumping Hours/Day (Rabi) | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
G.W Source | Mean | Standard Error 1 | Maximum | Mean | Standard Error 1 | Maximum | p Value |
Deep tubewells | 4 | ±0.68 | 22 | 3.6 | ±0.47 | 22 | ≪0.05 |
Medium tubewells | 4.4 | ±0.69 | 22 | 3.7 | ±0.5 | 22 | ≪0.05 |
Shallow tubewells | 3.9 | ±0.46 | 22 | 3.4 | ±0.33 | 22 | ≪0.05 |
Dug wells | 4 | ±0.4 | 22 | 3.5 | ±0.35 | 14 | ≪0.05 |
Surface-lift schemes | 3 | ±0.48 | 22 | 2.7 | ±0.35 | 22 | ≪0.05 |
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Gupta, B.; Rowan, J.S. Understanding Unsustainable Irrigation Practices in a Regionally Contested Large River Basin in Peninsular India Through the Lens of the Water–Energy–Food–Environment (WEFE) Nexus. Water 2025, 17, 1644. https://doi.org/10.3390/w17111644
Gupta B, Rowan JS. Understanding Unsustainable Irrigation Practices in a Regionally Contested Large River Basin in Peninsular India Through the Lens of the Water–Energy–Food–Environment (WEFE) Nexus. Water. 2025; 17(11):1644. https://doi.org/10.3390/w17111644
Chicago/Turabian StyleGupta, Bhawana, and John S. Rowan. 2025. "Understanding Unsustainable Irrigation Practices in a Regionally Contested Large River Basin in Peninsular India Through the Lens of the Water–Energy–Food–Environment (WEFE) Nexus" Water 17, no. 11: 1644. https://doi.org/10.3390/w17111644
APA StyleGupta, B., & Rowan, J. S. (2025). Understanding Unsustainable Irrigation Practices in a Regionally Contested Large River Basin in Peninsular India Through the Lens of the Water–Energy–Food–Environment (WEFE) Nexus. Water, 17(11), 1644. https://doi.org/10.3390/w17111644