Opener | Home | About Us | Work With Us | Contact Us

Watershed Development

SPS has taken up 112,000 acres for direct implementation of watershed programmes spread over 57 villages, leading to effective spending of Rs. 250 million and generating nearly 2 million person-days of employment. The total storage capacity of the water harvesting structures created by SPS is over 4 million cubic metres. This has had the primary impact of ensuring drinking water security to all households in these villages. Rabi irrigation has shown a rise of 300% and the overall irrigation ratio has more than doubled. A significant impact of the work has been drought-proofing of the kharif crop. As in any typical dryland region, rainfall in our area is low, highly erratic and characterized by long dry spells between rainy days.

SPS has taken up 112,000 acres for direct implementation of watershed programmes spread over 57 villages, leading to effective spending of Rs. 250 million and generating nearly 2 million person-days of employment.
Water harvesting structures help farmers tide over this crisis by providing crucial "life-saving" protective irrigation. We see the watershed programme as vital public investment to incentivise private investments by even the poorest farmers on their own lands.

The yield of kharif (mostly rainfed) crops has shown a rise in the range of 10-20% and that of rabi (mostly irrigated) crops has shown a rise of 60-70%. Overall, the value of production of kharif and rabi crops together has doubled.The Benefit-Cost Ratio ranges from 1.49 to 2.06 and Internal Rate of Return on investments from 30% to 49%.

An 80% reduction in distress migration has been observed during the years of ongoing watershed implementation. after the watershed programme closes. It is this "sedimented employment" which reduces external migration from the area in the long run. Hundreds of tribal farmers who have grown a single rainfed crop all their lives are now cultivating 2-3 crops. Many have returned home after years to reclaim land they had virtually given up for good. Our work has broken with conventional wisdom by recognising that watershed development is not just about harvesting rainwater; it is also about sharing it equitably and managing it collectively. Whenever our dams are built, written agreements are forged about water sharing, hours of pumping, sequence of irrigation, cropping patterns and watering intensities. In many cases, all households irrespective of their size of land holding are entitled to an equal share of the water. Our emphasis on equity and transparency has often met with severe resistance from vested interests. Our response has been non-violent, collective satyagraha, always aimed at building common ground with those opposed to us. SPS Core Team members Rangu Rao, Pramathesh Ambasta, Murlidhar Kharadia and Narendra Patel lead the watershed team.

SPS Core Team members Rangu Rao, Pramathesh Ambasta, Murlidhar Kharadia and Milind Pandit lead the watershed team.