Groundwater Irrigation and Flood Rehabilitation Project

IfadAssetRequestWeb

Asset Publisher

Groundwater Irrigation and Flood Rehabilitation Project

Groundwater Irrigation and Flood Rehabilitation Project

The Terai region has good potential for agricultural development and a reasonably robust marketing and communications network. Agricultural development of the region will help feed Nepal’s rapidly rising population. This project’s aims were to raise crop yields, improve farmer’s incomes and increase food security for the poor by providing irrigation systems. It also set out to repair damage to existing irrigation systems that were hit by the floods of July and August 1993, and to restore livelihoods to people living in the flooded areas.

The project offered an opportunity to research and test possible technical and institutional options for efficient and equitable development of groundwater irrigation.

Source: IFAD


Status: Closed
Country
Nepal
Approval Date
19 April 1994
Duration
1994 - 2001
Sector
Irrigation
Total Project Cost
US$ 13.21 million
IFAD Financing
US$ 9.88 million
Co-financiers (International)
World Food Programme US$ 1.89 million
Financing terms
Highly Concessional
Project ID
1100000352

Project design reports

Project design reports

Project design report Region: Latin America and the Caribbean

Environmental and social impact assessment

Final environmental and social management framework

Interim (mid-term) review report

Resettlement action framework

PCR digest

Special study

Project list

Project completion report

Co-financiers

Related

Related

Brazil: Sharing Buriti with the rest of the world

February 2022 - VIDEO

Brejo Dois Irmãos is a tiny and isolated community of 200 families in north-east Brazil. It hides a precious treasure: the burití, or “tree of life” in the indigenous Tupi-Guarani language.

Smartphones keep track of IFAD projects’ achievements and challenges in Brazil during COVID-19

July 2020 - STORY

For all the chaos they bring, crises also have a way of giving birth to unexpected opportunities. One way they do this is by urging people to develop new tools to help them resist disaster. 

Recovery, reactivation and resilience: Confronting COVID-19 in Latin America and the Caribbean

April 2020 - BLOG
With half of the planet’s population locked down, the global economy brought to a halt and the number of cases reaching into the millions, it is clear that the COVID-19 pandemic is the biggest crisis of our time.