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India Should Use Israeli Model Of Drip Irrigation System, Expert Suggests

India should use Israeli model of drip irrigation system; suggests Indian expert.

A farmer prepares a drip irrigation line in a tomato field in Kempalinganapura, Bengaluru Rural district, Karnataka, India. (Photographer: Prashanth Vishwanathan/Bloomberg)
A farmer prepares a drip irrigation line in a tomato field in Kempalinganapura, Bengaluru Rural district, Karnataka, India. (Photographer: Prashanth Vishwanathan/Bloomberg)

India should adopt Israel’s model of drip irrigation system as it is based on farmers’ requirements and is not industry-designed like the one used in the country, a noted Indian water conservationist has suggested.

Popatrao Pawar also called for cultivating crops based on climate or crop patterning and putting an end to flood irrigation—common across India.

“The success of drip irrigation in Israel is due to all consideration being given to the farmers’ requirements,” said Pawar at the IIMPACT 2019, a pan-IIM Alumni conference.

In India, the drip irrigation system is industry-designed with no input from farmer, he said.

Pawar’s water conservation in Hiware Bazar village of Maharashtra helped improve the water table level by 35-40 feet. He led the village’s transformation from a drought-prone village to a green and prosperous model village.

His water conservation model is being taught at institutions such as Pune University and IIT Delhi.

Pawar said he convinced his village farmers to skip one season of Rabi crop and save water.

“This resulted in everybody taking a rest and holidays, the field fertility improved by going through fallow process and immense savings of water and power,” he told PTI.

“More than 80 percent of these districts are adopting the Hiware Bazar model to conserve water,” said Pawar, who has travelled to China, Israel and Malaysia among other countries sharing his knowledge of water conservation.