Brief description of documents

     
    Title Irrigation management transfer in Mexico: a strategy to achieve irrigation district sustainability.
(Research report, 31 pages)
         
    Author   Sam H. Johnson III
         
    Organisation   International Water Management Institute
         
    Year   1997
         
    Summary/
Introduction
       In Mexico, the percentage of irrigation operation and maintenance costs paid by users declined from 95 percent in the early 1950s to below 20 percent in the early 1980s. As a result of the shortage of funds, the irrigation districts deferred maintenance leading to a serious reduction in output and decline in the infrastructure. To solve this problem, in 1989, the government instituted a program of transferring management from the National Water Commission (CNA) to the water users. The transfer program in Mexico took off very quickly and by the end of 1996 more than 88 percent of the 3.3 million hectares of publicly irrigated land in the country had been transferred to joint management. Water user associations have proven capable of jointly operating and maintaining irrigation districts. Water tariffs collected by the users (in excess of US$180 million in 1995) have supported not only water user operation and maintenance (O&M) activities but also the majority of the O&M activities by CNA staff. In particular, maintenance activities carried out by the water user associations have stopped the deterioration in the infrastructure and hence have accomplished one of the major objectives of the transfer program. To sustain the transferred districts, the users need to establish an investment fund to cover emergencies and future development. In addition, it is necessary to clarify the water laws to protect agricultural water rights.
         
       

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