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A scale-based framework to understand the promises, pitfalls and paradoxes of irrigation efficiency to meet major water challenges

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Date

Authors

Lankford, B.A.
Closas, Alvar
Dalton, James
Lopez-Gunn, Elena
Hess, Tim
Knox, Jerry W
Kooij, Saskia van der
Lautze, Jonathan
Molden, David
Orr, Stuart

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Volume Title

Publisher

Elsevier

Abstract

An effective placement of irrigation efficiency in water management will contribute towards meeting the pre-eminent global water challenges of our time such as addressing water scarcity, boosting crop water productivity and reconciling competing water needs between sectors. However, although irrigation efficiency may appear to be a simple measure of performance and imply dramatic positive benefits, it is not straightforward to understand, measure or apply. For example, hydrological understanding that irrigation losses recycle back to surface and groundwater in river basins attempts to account for scale, but this generalisation cannot be readily translated from one location to another or be considered neutral for farmers sharing local irrigation networks. Because irrigation efficiency (IE) motives, measures, effects and technologies play out at different scales for different people, organisations and purposes, and losses differ from place to place and over time, IE is a contested term, highly changeable and subjective. This makes generalisations for science, management and policy difficult. Accordingly, we propose new definitions for IE and irrigation hydrology and introduce a framework, termed an ‘irrigation efficiency matrix’, comprising five spatial scales and ten dimensions to understand and critique the promises, pitfalls and paradoxes of IE and to unlock its utility for addressing contemporary water challenges.

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Source

Global Environmental Change - Human and Policy Dimensions

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Access Statement

Open Access

License Rights

Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY)

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