COLOMBO, 1 August 2013 (IRIN) - One way Sri Lanka can better manage its
water resources in the face of changing monsoon patterns is through
centuries-old water reservoirs, experts say.
Experts at the Colombo-based International Water Management Institute (
IWMI)
say one way to ease fluctuating rice harvests (due to increasingly
erratic monsoon seasons) is to use thousands of ancient small irrigation
reservoirs spread out in the Northern, North Central, Eastern, North
Western and Southern provinces.
“Tanks [reservoirs] can store water and so are buffers against irregular
rainfall supplies,” said Herath Manthrithilake, the head of the
institute’s Sri Lanka Development Initiative.
The reservoirs were built between 300 and 400 BC to provide nearby
villages with water for agriculture and other needs. They became less
important with the introduction of rain-fed cash crops by European
colonizers in the 1500s and have been largely untouched since the 1970s
with the development of large irrigation and hydropower schemes.
The tanks were constructed by excavating earth and building a large wall
around the hole. Most tanks have filled up with sediment, others are
hidden by overgrown shrubs or belong to dilapidated networks connecting
them to the fields. There is no current estimate, but in 2004 the then
government estimated that it would cost some US$20 million at the 2004
exchange rate ($15 million now) to make the tanks functional.
For Werrakoddi Archchilage Premadasa, a 33-year-old farmer from
Tanamalvila town in southeastern Uva Province, the tank near his farm is
the main source of water for cultivation. “Now the problem is half of
the tank is overgrown and it’s also filled with sand… If we can get it
to store to its maximum capacity, I don’t think we will have issues with
water for cultivation.”
IWMI research has shown that reservoirs can also divert flood waters to
the old tanks built on low-lying land, helping to minimize flood damage.
Manthrithilake said a major renovation of thousands of such reservoirs (
estimated by researchers
to number some 12,000) should be launched if they are to be used
effectively. Some 1,000 tanks were repaired in 2004, with no additional
repairs planned since then.
“Managing the water resources will be crucial. The monsoon, our main
source of water, is changing, forcing us to change the way we use our
water resources,” Waduwatte Lekamlage Sumapthipala, formerly the head of
the Climate Change Unit at the Ministry of Environment and currently a
government adviser, told IRIN.
Weather predictions
A recent
World Bank report warned the island’s dry regions are likely to experience less rain while wet zones are at risk of even more deluges.
“The seasonal distribution of precipitation is expected to become
amplified, with a decrease of up to 30 percent during the dry season and
a 30 percent increase during the wet season,” the report predicted.
Late 2012 and early 2013 floods affected more than one million people
nationwide, while a 2012 drought hit an estimated 1.3 million residents.
A survey of flood-affected communities conducted by the Sri Lanka
government and the World Food Programme in January this year found 75
percent of the 557,000 people surveyed were either severely food
insecure or borderline food insecure.
Of those surveyed, some 33 percent said their main income was through agriculture.
Fluctuating rice production
Rice production has been at the mercy of increasingly unpredictable
monsoons in the past three years. In 2011, large harvest losses, around
20 percent of the main harvest, were recorded due to floods.
But the harvest recovered to an extent in mid-2011 when rain-fed irrigation helped to produce a higher-than-average
secondary harvest (the country has two harvests annually).
During 2012’s drought the second annual rice harvest fell by up to 10 percent.
However according to the latest
country assessments
by the UN Food and Agriculture Organization, the rice harvest is
expected to recover this year, and is likely to be above four million
tons for the first time since 2009.
“The problem is the prices keep going up and down when the harvest falls
and picks up. When we don’t have means to keep prices steady, we should
look at keeping the harvest steady,” said Liyana Pathirana Rupasena,
the deputy director of research at the governmental Hector Kobbekaduwa
Agrarian Training and Research Institute (HARTI).
His concern is that poorer communities will cut back on calories or go
for rice varieties that are cheaper but less nutritious during price
hikes.
Rupasena said despite predicted harvest increases, rice
prices are still higher than in 2011 and 2012.
Hydropower problems
In addition to destabilizing rice production, water management problems
have hit the country’s energy supply. Sri Lanka typically generates
around 40 percent of its electricity using hydro generation.
During August 2012 when the drought was at its worst, hydro-generation
barely reached 15 percent; the remaining power was generated through
costly thermal sources, which forced the country to spend heavily on oil
imports, according to the state.
The 2012 oil import bill for thermal power was around US$2 billion,
around a tenth of what Colombo spent on imports for the entire year.
Heavy rains in 2013 have once again boosted
hydro-generation to nearly 80 percent.
According to Tilak Siyambalapitiya, an energy expert based in Colombo,
energy authorities should keep a close watch on the monsoon and emerging
climate trends. He said pre-ordering oil stocks to face a potential
loss in hydro capacity could save millions in foreign exchange fees.
“Right now the capacity of the reservoirs is totally dependent on the
rainfall. There is hardly anything done to manage the water effectively
once it’s in the reservoirs,” he said, referring to the reservoirs’ lack
of maintenance.
The hope is that the pre-historic tanks can help ease demand for water
from the nine main power-generating reservoirs, which farmers currently
draw from for cultivation.
ap/pt/cb