Publication // Mapping Policy for Solar Irrigation Across the Water-Energy-Food (WEF) Nexus in India
By Christopher Beaton, Purva Jain, Mini Govindan, Vibhuti Garg, Rashmi Murali, Dimple Roy, Andrea Bassi, Georg Pallaske. This paper seeks to assist policy-makers and researchers in India who are working to promote the uptake of off-grid, solar-powered pumps for groundwater irrigation (“off-grid solar pumps”).
Globally, many people do not have adequate access to water, energy and food: 2.1 billion people lack access to safely managed drinking water; almost 1 billion lack access to electricity and 2.7 billion lack access to clean cooking; and 821 million face chronic food deprivation. Yet water, energy and food systems are all under increasing pressure from rapid growth in economies, consumption patterns and population.
The Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) recognize the need to deliver access sustainably through dedicated goals on each theme: SDG 2 (zero hunger), SDG 6 (clean water and sanitation) and SDG 7 (affordable and clean energy). As targets, the SDGs cannot themselves recognize or address linkages—but if all three targets are to be met by 2030, then it is important to weigh up potential trade-offs. The “water–energy–food (WEF) nexus” means that there are interconnections in all three areas. Implementing a policy to address one objective can have detrimental impacts on another.
This paper seeks to assist policy-makers and researchers in India who are working to promote the uptake of off-grid, solar-powered pumps for groundwater irrigation. It begins by setting out key WEF linkages of importance for off-grid solar pumps. It then establishes an approach for identifying policies across the WEF nexus that are key for off-grid solar pumps and maps these policies at the Central Government level and in two states: Bihar and Rajasthan.
It recommends for off-grid pump policies to be coordinated with an upscaled set of efforts on addressing the sustainable use of groundwater in India. It also advises careful monitoring and evaluation of KUSUM, the government's new off-grid solar pumps scheme.
Key Messages
- To effectively promote off-grid solar pumps in India, it is important to understand the full landscape of central and state policies across water, energy and food (WEF) systems.
- This paper maps such policies and finds that many, including policies to promote off-grid solar pumps, do not explicitly acknowledge or account for complex WEF interactions, limiting their effectiveness and in some cases undermining objectives other areas.
- It recommends for off-grid pump policies to be coordinated with an upscaled set of efforts on addressing the sustainable use of groundwater in India. It also advises careful monitoring and evaluation of KUSUM, the government's new solar pumps scheme.
Published
August 2019
By
IISD (International Institute for Sustainable Development)
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© 2019 International Institute for Sustainable Development