Irrigation
Key facts
- Irrigation geography links water source, conveyance, command area and actual field use rather than treating a dam name as a complete answer.
- The Bhakra-Beas system and the Indira Gandhi Canal show how Himalayan river storage and diversion support canal commands in Punjab, Haryana and Rajast…
- Multipurpose projects such as Hirakud, Damodar Valley Corporation, Sardar Sarovar, Nagarjuna Sagar, Tungabhadra and Tehri combine irrigation with floo…
- Farakka is a barrage for Ganga-Hooghly flow and port navigability, so it must be separated from classic irrigation dams.
- The Command Area Development Programme and Pradhan Mantri Krishi Sinchayee Yojana explain the gap between potential created and water reaching fields.
Key Points at a Glance
- 1
Irrigation geography links water source, conveyance, command area and actual field use rather than treating a dam name as a complete answer.
- 2
The Bhakra-Beas system and the Indira Gandhi Canal show how Himalayan river storage and diversion support canal commands in Punjab, Haryana and Rajasthan.
- 3
Multipurpose projects such as Hirakud, Damodar Valley Corporation, Sardar Sarovar, Nagarjuna Sagar, Tungabhadra and Tehri combine irrigation with flood control, power or drinking water.
- 4
Farakka is a barrage for Ganga-Hooghly flow and port navigability, so it must be separated from classic irrigation dams.
- 5
The Command Area Development Programme and Pradhan Mantri Krishi Sinchayee Yojana explain the gap between potential created and water reaching fields.
- 6
Tube wells dominate porous alluvium; tanks fit hard-rock red-soil terrain; canals fit broad alluvial plains and engineered command areas.
- 7
Rajasthan connects the topic through the Indira Gandhi Canal, Narmada canal, PMKSY micro-irrigation and groundwater stress in arid districts.
How should irrigation be understood as a geographic system?
Irrigation in Indian geography should be understood as a complete water-control chain, from source and storage to field application and drainage. Irrigation is the controlled supply of water to fields, but in Indian geography it is better understood as a chain.
According to PIB / Ministry of Jal Shakti, the 6th Minor Irrigation Census reported 2.314 crore minor irrigation schemes in India.
Irrigation Chain
- Source
- Storage or diversion
- Conveyance
- Command area
- On-farm distribution
- Drainage
Why the Chain Matters
- Dam: A dam that stores water but lacks field channels does not by itself create secure crop water.
- Tube well: A tube well that lifts groundwater may serve a single holding immediately, but repeated pumping can lower the aquifer.
- Canal: A canal may cover a wide command, yet seepage, poor levelling and absent drainage can produce waterlogging or salinity.
- Rajasthan: Rajasthan makes this chain visible because western districts receive canal water from distant rivers while many eastern and southern districts still depend on tanks, wells, small reservoirs and micro-irrigation.
Policy and Programme Frame
| Programme / Source | Launch / Reference | Irrigation Role |
|---|---|---|
| Pradhan Mantri Krishi Sinchayee Yojana | Launched during 2015-16 | Sits at the policy end of this chain; links assured irrigation access, Har Khet Ko Pani, Per Drop More Crop and watershed development |
| Command Area Development Programme | Launched in 1974-75 | Sits inside the command itself: field channels, drains, land levelling and water-user participation help convert irrigation potential into actual irrigation |
| 6th Minor Irrigation Census | Source-based view | Groundwater schemes include dug wells and tube wells, while surface schemes include surface flow and lift irrigation |
Method Classification
| Irrigation Type | Geographic Fit | Key Distinction |
|---|---|---|
| Tube-well irrigation | Indo-Gangetic alluvium | Differs because it depends on groundwater lifting from alluvial aquifers |
| Tank irrigation | Hard-rock red-soil south India | Differs because it depends on local surface storage in hard-rock terrain |
| Canal irrigation | North Indian alluvial plains | Differs because it depends on broad canal commands and conveyance |
Rajasthan Relevance
- Low-rainfall districts: Need all three ideas at once: large canals for command transformation, micro-irrigation for water-use efficiency and groundwater management where extraction exceeds recharge.
- Major and medium irrigation projects: Usually public works with river regulation, dam safety and inter-state allocation questions.
- Minor irrigation: Closer to the farmer and includes wells, small lift schemes and local surface-flow structures.
- Micro-irrigation: Not a source category; it is a field-application technique that can use canal, well or farm-pond water.
- Practical distinction in arid Rajasthan: The same village may receive canal water in one command, pump groundwater from a declining aquifer nearby and use drip irrigation for orchard plots.
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PREDICTED Predicted RAS Questions
Based on PYQ trends and 2026 syllabus analysis
1 MCQ A multipurpose Sutlej system releases water through the Bhakra Main Canal after hydropower generation. Which project is being identified?
Explanation
Bhakra Nangal is the Sutlej multipurpose system tied to hydropower and irrigation water for Punjab, Haryana and Rajasthan. Farakka is a lower-Ganga barrage for Hooghly flow, Hirakud is on the Mahanadi, and Nagarjuna Sagar belongs to the Krishna basin.
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