Back to news
20 Feb 2015 | News

ICIMOD and partners launch project on community-based water use planning

ICIMOD hosted a workshop to launch the project ‘Reviving springs and providing access to solar powered irrigation pumps (SPIP) through community-based water use planning’ from 18 to 20 February 2015. The two-year project is funded by the CGIAR research programme on Water, Land and Ecosystems (WLE) under its Ganges Focal Region project. The project is led by ICIMOD in partnership with Helvetas (Nepal), ACWADAM (India), Atom Solar (India), and researchers from George Washington University and Harvard University.

2 mins Read

70% Complete
A delegation from the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) visited ICIMOD to discuss current and prospective areas for collaboration with ICIMOD.

The workshop aimed to explain how the concept of water use master plan (WUMP) would contribute to reviving springs and piloting SPIP in Nepal and India, as well as to share some of the spring revival work done by ICIMOD and Nepal Water Conservation Foundation (NWCF) in 2014. There were five sessions spread across three days.  The first session announced the formal launch of the project. The WLE programme on reviving springs and promoting SPIP will carry out impactful research to improve policy and the livelihoods of people in the mid-hills and the Terai region of Nepal. While implementing the project, special attention will be paid to women to ensure that they are included in the local planning process, revival of springs and piloting of solar pumps.

The second session was on WUMP and its use in reviving springs and piloting solar pumps. WUMP is a participatory bottom-up approach used by Helvetas and its partners for comprehensive mapping of all water resources followed by an investment prioritization activity by the same community. Bottom-up water resource planning methods like that of WUMP can play an important role in spring revival activities in the mid hills of Nepal and in India. Similarly, implementation of SPIP can benefit from such local level water use planning and buy-in by local governments.

In the third session the focus was on spring revival activities. ACWADAM has been promoting spring revival through an integrated approach, with spring shed as the implementing unit. Socioeconomic and possible changes in rainfall pattern have led to drying up of springs. Community awareness and involvement, especially through the active participation of women, is essential to promote a culture of conservation. Spring revival has not yet received the kind of policy attention it deserves. A decentralized framework with synergies across various sectors and community participation is required for spring shed development.

The fourth and fifth sessions were on SPIP. A major challenge for adoption of SPIP is the high upfront cost. Bangladesh has followed a grant and equity model. In India, states offer high subsidy for the systems. Nepal is yet to finalize a SPIP policy but the Alternative Energy Promotion Centre and the Department of Irrigation are keen to promote the technology. An innovative model, Solar Power as a Remunerative Crop (SPaRC), was introduced. Practitioners and companies from Bangladesh, India and Nepal presented various case studies and discussed the challenges and opportunities in this sector. During group discussion, participants analysed various financial and institutional models for the pilot to be conducted in the Nepal Terai.

Stay current

Stay up to date on what’s happening around the HKH with our most recent publications and find out how you can help by subscribing to our mailing list.

Sign Up

RELATED CONTENTS

Continue exploring this topic

8 Jun 2016 News
ICIMOD Meets with President of Nepal

ICIMOD along with key government organisations in the water supply sector were invited by the President of Nepal, Right Honorable ...

8 Mar 2017 Blog
Water Scarcity and Women’s Lives: an Observation from the Field

Recently, while on a research trip studying adaptive water governance under the Himalayan Adaption, Water and Resilience ...

24 Jan 2018 Cryosphere
Cryosphere Initiative field activities for the autumn 2017

Thana glacier, Bhutan In Bhutan, Sharad Joshi, Associate Glaciologist and two glaciologists from the Bavarian Academy of Sciences and Humanities, Germany, ...

31 Jul 2015 News
Hope for Kyaung Taung’s water woes

The village of Kyaung Taung in the Inle Lake area in Myanmar sits atop a hill overlooking Heho city. And ...

28 Dec 2016 News
ICIMOD Scientist Receives Young Scientist Award from NAST

Santosh Nepal, a water and climate specialist at ICIMOD, has been awarded the prestigious ‘Young Science and Technology Award’ by ...

7 Aug 2017 Himalica
Options to Strengthen Agricultural Practices and Technologies in the Midhills of Nepal

Speaking at the inaugural session of the event, Dila Ram Bhandari, Director General of the Department of Agriculture (DoA), said, ...

11 Apr 2016 Gender in Koshi
Water, Women and Livelihood Improvement

Water is the lifeblood of every household in Nepal's middle hills, but accessing it is a challenge. Hill hamlets depend ...

10 Jun 2018 HI-LIFE
HILIFE team conducts ethnobotanical study in nine villages in Myanmar

The study was conducted with a joint team from the Forest Department (FD) under the Ministry of Natural Resources and ...