Trading water: virtual water flows through interstate cereal trade in India
Open Access
- 1 December 2020
- journal article
- research article
- Published by IOP Publishing in Environmental Research Letters
- Vol. 15 (12), 125005
- https://doi.org/10.1088/1748-9326/abc37a
Abstract
Cereals are an important component of the Indian diet, providing 47% of the daily dietary energy intake. Dwindling groundwater reserves in India especially in major cereal-growing regions are an increasing challenge to national food supply. An improved understanding of interstate cereal trade can help to identify potential risks to national food security. Here, we quantify the trade between Indian states of five major cereals and the associated trade in virtual (or embedded) water. To do this, we modelled interstate trade of cereals using Indian government data on supply and demand; calculated virtual water use of domestic cereal production using state- and product-specific water footprints and state-level data on irrigation source; and incorporated virtual water used in the production of internationally-imported cereals using country-specific water footprints. We estimate that 40% (94 million tonnes) of total cereal food supply was traded between Indian states in 2011–12, corresponding to a trade of 54.0 km3 of embedded blue water, and 99.4 km3 of embedded green water. Of the cereals traded within India, 41% were produced in states with over-exploited groundwater reserves (defined according to the Central Ground Water Board) and a further 21% in states with critically depleting groundwater reserves. Our analysis indicates a high dependency of Indian cereal consumption on production in states with stressed groundwater reserves. Substantial changes in agricultural practices and land use may be required to secure future production, trade and availability of cereals in India. Diversifying production systems could increase the resilience of India's food system.Keywords
Funding Information
- Wellcome Trust (NE/N01524X/1)
- Natural Environment Research Council (NE/N01524X/1)
This publication has 50 references indexed in Scilit:
- circlizeimplements and enhances circular visualization in RBioinformatics, 2014
- Rapid growth in agricultural trade: effects on global area efficiency and the role of managementEnvironmental Research Letters, 2014
- Growing water scarcity in agriculture: future challenge to global water securityPhilosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A: Mathematical, Physical and Engineering Sciences, 2013
- Food subsidy, income transfer and the poor: A comparative analysis of the public distribution system in India's statesJournal of Policy Modeling, 2013
- The water footprint of humanityProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2012
- The Gravity ModelAnnual Review of Economics, 2011
- The green, blue and grey water footprint of crops and derived crop productsHydrology and Earth System Sciences, 2011
- Refuting two claims about virtual water tradeEcological Economics, 2010
- Going against the flow: A critical analysis of inter-state virtual water trade in the context of India’s National River Linking ProgramPhysics and Chemistry of the Earth, Parts A/B/C, 2009
- Virtual Water in Global Food and Water Policy Making: Is There a Need for Rethinking?Water Resources Management, 2005