An integrated approach to land drainage
Abdel-Dayem, S. An integrated approach to land drainage Irrigation and Drainage Volume 55, Issue 3, July 2006, Pages 299-309.
Abdel-Dayem, S. An integrated approach to land drainage Irrigation
and Drainage Volume 55, Issue 3, July 2006, Pages 299-309.
Abstract- It is common to define drainage as a means to enhance
crop production and increase productivity. In order to meet this
objective, drainage systems are designed and managed to maintain
favourable moisture and salt conditions in the root zone. Examples
from around the world show that drainage has done well to achieve
this objective. However, lessons show that many impacts of
drainage, positive and negative, have been overlooked, including
those on health, built-up settlements and infrastructure, flood
management, groundwater recharge, sanitation, surface and
groundwater quality, fisheries and aquatic life, and the
environment in general. Thus, the single-objective approach takes
drainage out of the broader context of land and water management
and diminishes the overall gains of improved drainage and ignores
its full cost. It does also not allow the stakeholders from outside
the farming community to be involved in the decision-making leading
to conflict of interests. It also misses an important opportunity
for increasing the financing potential. A better understanding of
drainage as a practice for managing the multiple functions of land
and water resources is needed in order to achieve an optimal mix of
economic and social gains, sustainable natural resources management
and a healthy environment. This would only be possible when an
interdisciplinary and integrated approach is followed in planning
and managing land drainage. The approach, called DRAINFRAME, is a
framework for analysis, communication, discussion, and
decision-making by all stakeholders. It looks at the overall
social, economic, and environmental productivity of the entire
water management system, of which drainage is an integral part. It
allows comprehensive analysis and assessment of basin-wide social
and economic impacts of drainage following a participatory planning
approach. Although the methodology was developed from a drainage
perspective, it is geared towards natural resources management
planning in general. It can be equally used in planning irrigation,
flood control or watershed management projects. The DRAINFRAME
approach was applied in planning some new World Bank-supported
projects in Egypt and Pakistan with the objective of promoting the
concept of integrated water resources management.



