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Sustainability of farmers' organization of water management in the Office du Niger irrigation scheme in Mali

✍ Scribed by K. Vandersypen; A. C. T. Keita; K. Kaloga; Y. Coulibaly; D. Raes; J.-Y. Jamin


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2006
Tongue
English
Weight
92 KB
Volume
55
Category
Article
ISSN
1531-0353

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✦ Synopsis


The Office du Niger is a centrally managed collective irrigation scheme of 80 000 ha, mainly cultivated with flooded rice. In the context of recent reforms, water distribution and maintenance at the tertiary canal level were left to farmers. In this paper, their ability to resolve collective action problems through devising, monitoring and enforcing rules is diagnosed through a questionnaire survey of 89 farmers on 59 tertiary canals from five villages. Results show that rules are devised only on 30 and 24% of the canals for water distribution and maintenance respectively. Moreover, there is often no consensus on rules among farmers, and monitoring and sanctioning mechanisms are absent. This results in individualistic behavior causing problems concerning water distribution and maintenance for respectively 20 and 43% of the interviewed farmers. Ineffectiveness of peer pressure and farmers' incomplete mentality shift towards assuming collective responsibility are impediments to successful organization of water management. With water supply being abundant and the infrastructure recently rehabilitated, organization of water management at tertiary level is, however, not always required in order to avoid problems. On the other hand, the current state of affairs is not considered sustainable, as the irrigated area will strongly expand and the irrigation infrastructure ages with time. Measures of sensitization and group empowerment accompanying the process of management transfer will therefore be desirable.


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