Mutual Sustainability of Tubewell Farming and Aquifers (e-bog) af Khattak, Ahmad Saeed
Khattak, Ahmad Saeed (forfatter)

Mutual Sustainability of Tubewell Farming and Aquifers e-bog

875,33 DKK (inkl. moms 1094,16 DKK)
This book develops and presents a conceptual model for sustainable-groundwater irrigated agriculture. The model is based on the general principles of the economic theories of cost-benefit relations and behavioral models of resource use. The study has evaluated the advances in tubewell farming and the aquifer potential in arid Balochistan over a period of three decades. It has analyzed the booms...
E-bog 875,33 DKK
Forfattere Khattak, Ahmad Saeed (forfatter)
Forlag Springer
Udgivet 2 juli 2014
Genrer Hydrology and the hydrosphere
Sprog English
Format pdf
Beskyttelse LCP
ISBN 9783319028040
This book develops and presents a conceptual model for sustainable-groundwater irrigated agriculture. The model is based on the general principles of the economic theories of cost-benefit relations and behavioral models of resource use. The study has evaluated the advances in tubewell farming and the aquifer potential in arid Balochistan over a period of three decades. It has analyzed the booms and busts of the farming over time taking into consideration the local aquifer limitations and the socio-political considerations and policy framework. Three data sets - farmers, expert officials and satellite images - have been used to aid validation. By observing the most vital parameters, the study has concluded that the local aquifer has been falling at a rate directly proportional to the growth rate of irrigated farming, suggesting the current development process is unsustainable. For instance, the research finds that tubewell bores have reached down to depths where the term "e;aquifer mining"e; applies; as a result, irrigation costs have become too high to allow farming to be economically viable. In addition, desertification is steadily encroaching and the cropping pattern being changed from high-value horticulture to subsistence cropping. The study has also set parameters for assessing the willingness of farmers to accept modern, sustainable strategies and interventions.