Irrigation and territory in the southeast of Spain: Evolution and future perspectives within new hydrological planning

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Abstract

The model of the regional economic development of southern Spain cannot be understood without taking into account intensive irrigated agriculture and its inextricable relationship with water availability. In this semi-arid territory, the need to ensure the efficiency of agricultural water use has been a constant, which has led to the gradual modernization of systems of resource use. However, the total water demand in the Segura River Basin and Almeria province has increased to exceed the limits of natural resources, resulting in a structural water deficit with an unsustainable trend, as is highlighted in hydrological planning. In this paper we analyse the shape, socio-economic and environmental consequences of the expansion of irrigation in Murcia and of greenhouses in Almeria. It becomes clear that the main shortcoming is the structural shortage of groundwater. The paper concludes with the idea that, despite this severe limitation, more productive irrigation could absorb the higher costs of a solution based on water from coastal desalination to solve the hydrological deficit and, in turn, can become a guarantor of the quality of the ecosystems, food security and good territorial order within the sector. © 2011 WIT Press.

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APA

Grindlay, A. L., Lizárraga, C., Rodríguez, M. I., & Molero, E. (2011). Irrigation and territory in the southeast of Spain: Evolution and future perspectives within new hydrological planning. WIT Transactions on Ecology and the Environment, 150, 623–638. https://doi.org/10.2495/SDP110521

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