Wastewater irrigation in developing countries : limitations for farmers to adopt appropriate practices

Date

2005

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

John Wiley & Sons

Abstract

Farmers using wastewater in developing countries are often limited in adopting safeguards for human, animal and environmental health control and in improving beneficial use of water and nutrients. Case studies from Ghana, Bolivia, Pakistan, Tunisia and Mexico are used to illustrate the complex factors that influence the use of wastewater by farmers. Limitations are identified as: nutrient management, choice of crops, irrigation methods, health risk regulation and land and water rights. In some cases the most viable approach is to acknowledge irrigation as a land-based treatment method, which requires sharing of costs and responsibilities between wastewater producers, government institutions and farmers.

Description

Published online in Wiley InterScience (www.interscience.wiley.com)

Keywords

WASTEWATER USE, DEVELOPING COUNTRIES, APPROPRIATE PRACTICES, NUTRIENT MANAGEMENT, CROP CHOICE, IRRIGATION METHODS, HEALTH, WATER RIGHTS

Citation

DOI