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Tanks in Today's Context:
Critical Issues in Raising 'Gross Tank Product'
Time, Date
0900 - 1300 hours, 28th January 2003
Panel
Ved Arya, Arun Pandhi, Niranjan Pant, K V Raju
Coordinator
Abhishek Sharma
Contact
a.sharma@cgiar.org
Despite their dubious role in the agrarian history of feudal India, our Zamindaars and Raja's did to their subjects some small acts of kindness. One of these was building tanks, several hundred thousand of them that pepper the Indian landscape. Just three states--Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka and Tamilnadu-had apparently well over 100,000 on the eve of Independence. North Indian states too have tanks and similar structures. Besides countless tiny johads and paal's, Rajasthan has 4500 minor irrigation tanks, each several times bigger than a typical tank in Tamilnadu or Sri Lanka. South Bihar's Ahar-Pyne systems and Bundelkhand's Chandeli tanks are also substantial and numerous structures bequeathed to local communities mostly by the erstwhile Jagirdaars and Raja's. So central have these been to village society and ecology, that progressive regents like Sayajirao Gaikwad's rural development program for the erstwhile princely state of Baroda essentially consisted of giving each village a temple, a public library and a tank! But today, India's tanks lie in a state of disrepair, partly due to the onslaught of modernization and urbanization, but partly also because their context has changed beyond recognition. Evolution of modern irrigation systems has certainly taken its toll; but above all, the rise of the pump irrigation technology has fundamentally altered the organic relationship between tanks and 'tank communities'. In this changed context, characterized by growing water scarcity, is there scope for reinventing this relationship?
Author(s) / Speaker(s)
PPT
Topic
Presentation of Experiences
Niranjan Pant Tanks in India: A study of the Ahar-Pyne system in Bihar (Jharkhand)
R. Seenivasan
Review of DHAN's work on tank rehabilitation
G. Bhaskara Rao
Review of SPWD's work on tank rehabilitation
V. Ratna Reddy
Revival of traditional water harvesting systems: SPWD's percolation initiative (tentative)
Abhishek Sharma Cock-Eyed View of Tank Management- Results From a Study of 5 Tanks In Andhra Pradesh
Presentation of Action Agenda
Ved Arya
Concept note on community driven integrated water management and sustainable livelihoods in a micro river basin in Karnataka
G. Shriramappa
Oxfam India's Strategy for Tank Revival in Southern India
R Sakthivadivel and Abhishek Sharma
Summary of Presentations and Outlining the Agenda for Panel Discussion
Panel Discussion
Exploring the role of tanks in India- Direction for future research: Research and policy issues in tanks in different parts of India
     

 

   
 
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