Jain Irrigation Systems Ltd.
Small Ideas, Big Revolutions.®
Home About Jains Investors Information Sitemap/Search Contact us Career / Job
Jains Share in Agriculture
   You are here: Home - Company - Company - News @ Jains - A Visit to India, and Hope for the Worlds Water
More Crop Per Drop ®
About Us
History
Corporate Philosophy
Quality Policy
Environment Policy
Recognitions
We as Other see us
Establishments
Trademarks
R & D Facilities
Gratitude
Jobs @ jains
Requirements
Investors Information

Locate us

Downloads

News @ Jains - A Visit to India, and Hope for the Worlds Water

I write this from western India, where Ive traveled at the request of the International Finance Corporation (IFC) to assist in reviewing the influence of irrigated agriculture on water scarcity and freshwater ecosystems. It’s my first trip to India, and Im getting an eyeful.

One of my first images of India is a memory that Im trying hard to shake off. Soon after leaving the Aurangabad airport by car, we passed an old woman washing her clothes in the filthy water collecting in a roadside drainage ditch, tainted with animal and human waste, motor oil and who knows what else.

A moment later, we crossed over a river bridge, where we could see hundreds of people bathing and drinking directly from a river that was clearly bearing a heavy pollution load.

This is the raw face of poverty, and a poignant example of the often-brutal connections between water, poverty and human health.

I must admit that Ive become a bit too complacent about oft-repeated statistics about water and global health — that 1 billion people lack access to clean drinking water, for instance, or that a child dies every 17 seconds somewhere on the planet from waterborne disease.

But when you see those tragedies unfolding before your eyes you cant help but become reinvigorated to do everything possible to make the world better.

So why am I now leaving India hopeful for a more secure water future for this country and other developing nations?

Our focus for the trip was a review of one companys influence on agriculture in India. Jain Irrigation Systems Ltd., headquartered in Jalgaon, supplies two-thirds of the "micro-irrigation" systems in India — they are the drip- and sprinkler-irrigation kings in this part of the world.

During the past couple of days, weve visited a number of onion, mango and cotton farms that were until recently "flood irrigated", meaning that water is poured onto the farm until flooded. A good portion of that water evaporates, doing nothing for the crop. Jain is helping farmers purchase water-efficient irrigation systems and providing them with the basic know-how to operate them properly.

The results have been quite spectacular. The farmers are using an average of 40 percent less water, which means that a lot more water stays in the aquifer or river, where it will benefit fish, trees and birds.

This is where poverty alleviation and conservation meet each other. And it is exactly the type of improved water use The Nature Conservancy wants to encourage through our new water certification program, which will recognize companies taking action to reduce their water use and pollution.

More important for Indias farmers is the fact that theyre getting 50 percent more crop from their farms. As the saying goes, "more crop per drop". Farmer after farmer told us stories about how they could barely scratch out a living before they switched to micro-irrigation. Now they have money to build safe drinking water wells, feed their families and send their kids to school.

India faces a daunting water future. Most of the country is running short of water. Its population continues to swell. Already more than 450 million live in poverty here..

But I leave India with a hopeful heart. A water-efficiency revolution is taking place, and it is spreading beyond India.

Source: http://www.mnn.com/earth-matters/wilderness-resources/stories/a-visit-to-india-and-hope-for-the-worlds-water

Top

   
Products & Services Events / News Add to Favroite © Jain Irrigation Systems Ltd.