Agricultural productivity continues to be low in South Asian economies such as India. For example, the average paddy production per hectare in India is 3590 kg, which is much lower compared to 6686 kg per ha. in China informs this paper titled 'Effect of irrigation on farm efficiency in tribal villages of Eastern India' published in Agricultural Water Management.
The agricultural sector is highly sensitive to water variability and more vulnerable to climate change as water-intensive crop production is found to consume over 70 percent of global water.
Irrigation has been found to play a crucial role in offsetting the impact of rising temperatures and acts as a viable adaptation strategy to climate change. The demand for irrigation water for crop production has been projected to increase sharply in the next few decades and governments in developing economies are increasingly focusing on the expansion of the irrigation infrastructure to promote agricultural development.
Paddy, wheat, and maize are major crops cultivated in more than half of the total farm area in India. However, nearly 40 percent of the cultivated areas are rain-fed, and the average efficiency of farms is only 38 percent, which is much below the desired level of 70 percent.
The paper discusses the findings of a study that estimates the efficiency of agricultural productivity for rain-fed and irrigated paddy cultivation in the eastern province of India.
The findings:
The paper calls for the need to :