Mitigating climate change impacts on India agriculture through improved Irrigation water Management

Lead Research Organisation: Heriot-Watt University
Department Name: Sch of Energy, Geosci, Infrast & Society

Abstract

In this project, we propose to investigate the effects of climate change and variability on irrigation water security in India and to evaluate the effectiveness of better irrigation and water management strategies in mitigating any water shortage situation and so improve the productivity of the available water. To assess the impacts of climate change on the runoff and hence on groundwater recharge and inflows into rivers, canals and on-farm reservoir systems at the catchment scale, we will use the Soil Water Assessment Tool (SWAT) hydrological model, appropriately calibrated and validated, and a range of GCMs projections and emissions scenarios.

To better understand the impacts on irrigation water requirements at the farm scale, we propose to use an existing physically-based root water uptake model that will be further calibrated and tested using data that will be collected at experimental farms in four diverse climatic zones spread over the four Indian states of Haryana, Himachal Pradesh, Uttarapradesh and Uttarakhand. For future conditions, the calibrated model will be coupled with the SWAT model.

Given the assessed irrigation water requirements for the future, the adequacy of existing on-farm irrigation infrastructures- direct river abstractions, reservoirs and tube wells- will be assessed in terms of reliability, vulnerability, resilience and sustainability. We propose to develop better operational practices for the infrastructures- e.g. enhanced rule curves for reservoirs, conjunctive use of reservoirs, rivers, groundwater etc- that will temper the effect of water shortages or desynchronise water availability from rainfall on crop production. The project will involve collaboration between internationally-leading scientists at 3 Indian institutions (IIT-Roorkee; NIT-Kurukshetra; NIT, Hamirpur) and 2 UK Universities: Heriot-Watt University, Edinburgh (H-WU), Cranfield University (CU). It will build on an existing and thriving collaboration between the H-WU team and the team at the IIT-Roorkee. We will work with stakeholders in India (farmers, regional and regional to national policymakers) and leading UK irrigation practitioners. The project will last for 48 months and comprise four work packages as follows:

WP 1- Impacts and uncertainty, of climate change on water resources availability for agriculture in India: This WP aims to understand climate change impacts on water availability and to identify thresholds in catchment/aquifer-scale runoff, groundwater recharge and responses (led by CU).
WP 2- Impacts of shifting temporal and spatial rainfall patterns on crop-soil moisture regimes and potential irrigation demand, and associated field experimentation: The effects of the changing temperature and rainfall patterns on farm-scale soil moisture and hence future irrigation water requirements with be assessed with IIT-R physically-based root water uptake model, which will be further calibrated and validated against observed crop yields and soil moisture data from dedicated field experiments at 4 sites across 4 Indian states (Led by IIT-R).
WP 3- Understanding the potential of robust irrigation water management practices and systems to reduce the impacts of future water scarcity: The effectiveness of on-farm infrastructures will be assessed for their reliability, vulnerability resilience and sustainability to deliver irrigation water needs for existing and climate-change conditions. Better operational practices- irrigation water scheduling; rule and operating policies for on-farm reservoirs; conjunctive use and artificial recharge- that are robust to the uncertainties in the climate change predictions will be developed and evaluated (Led by H-WU)
WP 4- Stakeholder engagement and dissemination: A broad range of contextually-appropriate engagement and dissemination activities will be co-ordinated by IIT-Roorkee throughout the project duration, to maximise stakeholder buy-in (Joint UK/Indian led).

Planned Impact

In this project, our research will inform how food security can be sustained or enhanced when faced with dwindling and/or less reliable water availability resulting from the changing water cycle. At the strategic level, a wide range of organisations with responsibility for policy and practice in relation to water and natural resources, rural development and food security will benefit. These include the National and State Ministries of Agriculture, Rural Development, Earth Sciences, Environment and Forest (national). All this will ensure that our activities complement and contribute to the overarching Impact and Knowledge Exchange plan of the Changing Water Cycle.
The ultimate beneficiaries are small scale, rural Indian farmers who depend on rainfed and irrigated agriculture for their livelihoods, for whom the research will contribute towards improved practices of water management and sustainable irrigation production that are more resilient to climate variability and change.
Users involved in research to improve our understanding of how climate change interacts with the global to regional water cycle, and the consequent impacts affecting humankind and ecosystems will also benefit from the research outcomes. Given that water resource systems are fundamental to the delivery and maintenance of many ecosystem goods and services including Provisioning (food and freshwater), Regulating (water purification), Cultural (aesthetic, recreational) services upon which society and the environment depend, the proposal will have benefit to a wide range of researchers and practitioners involved in understanding many diverse areas of ecosystem goods and services, e.g. groundwater and surface water modelling, rural development, aquatic ecology, surface water quality etc.
A number of activities will be staged in order to achieve these impacts, including:
(1)Network development- participating research institutions in India will profit from enhanced technical capacities through close working relations with their UK counterparts while the UK researchers benefit through new knowledge gained from interactions with their Indian counterparts;
(2)Stakeholder engagement through creation of a multi-stakeholder platform that will link the research team and key end users in India and act as a focal point for a range of outreach and networking activities. The purpose of this is to allow user groups to articulate their needs and priorities, contribute to the research design and implementation;
(3)Workshops- we will carry out 2 workshops with farmer organizations, central and state government irrigation agencies and agricultural extension advisers at the start and end of the project. These will provide valuable opportunities for two-way learning, allowing improved understanding of climate change impact and the need to improve irrigation practices and to ensure that the research produces contextually-relevant results to maximise impact;
(4)Site visits- We propose a 5 day UK study visit for representatives of the extension services in the State Department of Agriculture in our 4 states and research collaborators, featuring a workshop and site visits to commercial irrigated agriculture facilities mainly in Eastern England. The workshop will be designed and led by RTCS Ltd, a research, training and consultancy services outfit specialising in all aspects of irrigation advice and training;
(5)Publications in peer-reviewed journals and presentation at learned conferences; and (6)website- dedicated websites will be developed on each of Heriot-Watt, Cranfied and IIT-R central websites on which outputs from the project will be mounted. This will be enhanced by seeking and obtaining approval for weblinks, e.g. CGIAR, ICARDA, UNESCO, IIED and IAHS, to the project's webpages to increase potential site visitors. Summary outputs will be disseminated to the UNESCO-IHP GRAPHIC, IAH Commission on Groundwater & Climate Change, IAHS Commission on water resources.

Publications

10 25 50
 
Description Aim and Objectives
In MICCI, we have investigated the effects of climate change and variability on irrigation water security in Beas River Basin, India, and evaluated the effectiveness of better irrigation water management strategies that improve the productivity of the available water. The specific objectives of the study are to:
1. Assess the impacts, and uncertainty, of climate change on water resources availability for agriculture within a range of climatically and hydrologically diverse areas across India;
2. Assess the impacts of climate-induced shifting patterns in monsoon rainfall on crop-soil moisture regimes and potential irrigation demand;
3. Develop and evaluate the effectiveness of improved irrigation water management approaches (scheduling, on-farm reservoir operational practices) to achieve stakeholder-relevant outcomes under uncertain impacts on water resources and soil moisture changes;
4. Implement relevant impact plan activities which will ensure that stakeholders- farmers, policy makers, irrigation advisers, researchers, etc.- derive maximum benefits from the project's outcome.

As noted above, the test basin was the Beas and the focus was on its Pong reservoir which meets the irrigation needs of 1.4 Mha of cultivated land and generates hydro-power (396 MW installed capacity) for Himachal Pradesh, the Punjab, Haryana and Rajasthan States. The key findings of MICCI are as outlined below:

Key Findings
• In the medium term, most combinations of climate change situations will lead to increased river flows and water availability for agriculture. However, in the longer term, the loss of Himalayan glaciers will lead to significantly reduced flows and water availability under most combinations of climate change. The effect of this on the vulnerability (or maximum single period water shortage) of the Pong reservoir was high (~61%). The development of optimised hedging-integrated operating policy reduced the worst case vulnerability to a mere 20%, which is much more tolerable for most water users. This is obviously a much cheaper option than alternative structural solution involving new infrastructural planning and development.
• A further significant effect of the simulated hydrological situations is to cause reductions in summer crop (e.g. Corn) yield unless the current rain-fed system is supplemented with irrigation. Winter crop production is, however, likely to increase. The decrease in summer crop production with temperature rise is bound to cause concerns for food security in India in the future. To avert this, farmers need to adapt by shifting to temperature resistant varieties or move production to cooler lands. The latter option may not be a problem in the Himalayan region, but could pose significant challenges in low-lying areas of India.
• Increased temperatures and energy (especially bioenergy) demand may lead to land-use change (conversion of natural vegetation to food and/or bioenergy crops). Although our survey and interviews to gauge this did not reveal huge appetite for this among the bioenergy sector in India, its occurrence if not well managed may lead to increased sediment yield in the Beas Basin with consequences for the performance and operation of the Pong reservoir and other hydraulic structures.
• Our extensive field experiments have revealed large amount of deep percolation losses in the irrigation fields based on current irrigation practices. Reducing these losses will no doubt improve water use efficiency and also help in averting the water shortage problems. Better education of farmers on irrigation water scheduling and more accurate forecasts of rainfall will go a long way in addressing this problem.
• On-farm reservoirs have again been demonstrated to offer a way by which farmers can be in control of their decision making in the application of irrigation water. As shown in our studies, savings of up to 23% in groundwater abstractions can be achieved by installing on-farm reservoirs and harvesting rainfall and runoff. Decision to construct on-farm reservoirs by individual farmers may depend on financial resources available; consequently a commitment by government to offer support through subsidies or other schemes should be considered.
• Data acquisition has been a major constraint in this research and everyone seems powerless to do something about it. It is our view that more hydro-meteorological data should be made available for this kind of studies in the future so that the full benefits of the scientific endeavour will be realisable.
Exploitation Route • Our calibrated and validated rainfall-runoff model for the Beas Basin is available and can be used by others interested in further hydrological investigations in the Basin or elsewhere. The HYSIM model is very parsimonious in terms of its data requirements and the fact that we have been able to demonstrate its high efficiency in the catchment should engender confidence in its use for future hydrological investigations.
• Our extensive field experiments have resulted in the measurement of actual evapotranspiration for major crops grown in India, including rice, wheat, corn, berseem and mustard. This information, although very important for accurate irrigation water scheduling, is often lacking and has often been indirectly estimated from the theoretical reference crop evapotranspiration. We believe that the availability of the actual evapotranspiration field measurements will be very useful to irrigation engineers and managers in the region for water scheduling purposes. Additionally, the data can be used in accurately characterising crop coefficients for the region, which will be much better than the recommended approach of calibrating these coefficients from values developed for USA conditions.
• The effectiveness of the newly improved rule curves that incorporate hedging in significantly reducing large water shortages should be of use to many other water stressed hot-spots in the world. We have demonstrated through this work that most water resources systems have inherent buffering capacity that improved operational practices can harness. This important aspect of our work has been published as open access, thus making it readily accessible to interested parties. We have also produced Factsheets in Hindi language for the benefit of local farmers and other stakeholders that do not speak English.
• On farm reservoirs are a feature of water management for most farmers in the world, especially where water is scarce and the provision from formalised systems is not reliable but very few studies have quantified the water saving potential of such reservoirs. Our work has demonstrated the huge benefits that on-farm reservoirs have especially in relation to water savings and the empowerment of decision making rights by the typical farmer. Although this aspect of the work is yet to be published, such a quantitative demonstration of on-farm reservoirs water saving and other potentials should justify their more widespread use even in water rich environments.
• Irrigation water application efficiency can be significantly increased if deep percolation losses are curtailed. Our study has successfully demonstrated that the much talked-about low irrigation efficiency in India owes much to the excessive deep percolation losses taking place in the irrigation fields. Although deep percolation depends on the soil characteristics, irrigation water application methods, etc., we believe that the finding in our study will be useful to government irrigation advisory services, farmers, water resources facilities managers, etc. for developing practices for improving the productivity of their water.
Sectors Agriculture, Food and Drink,Education,Energy,Environment,Government, Democracy and Justice

URL https://web.sbe.hw.ac.uk/sites/micci/
 
Description This project officially ended in March, 2016 and one impact of the successful completion of the project is that a group largely comprising original members of MICCI has won funding from the Newton-Bhabha Fund to further look into how to sustain Himalayan Water Resources in a changing climate, SusHi-Wat. In bidding for SushI-Wat, we had a relatively easy access to our stakeholders due to the good rapport we had established during MICCI and the significance of this cannot be over-emphasised. The resulting mutual trust between the UK and Indian investigators on one hand, and between the investigators and the stakeholders on the other is crucial for realising the full impacts of a project that depends on its uptake by the beneficiaries. Thus, as revealed below, we are encouraged by the following two examples of the impacts being generated by the project: • Our finding that climate change will cause summer crop yields to reduce was corroborated by Farmers' representative at a stakeholders workshop in Roorkee in March 2015 who claimed to have started experiencing the decline even now. Our message to start thinking about switching to more heat tolerant and/or less water intensive crops was thus enthusiastically accepted by the farmers at the workshop, including their national president who promised to disseminate the message much more widely. Our effort in this regard has been greatly aided by the bi-lingual (English and Hindi) MICCI Briefing Factsheets provided for distribution to all stakeholders. We will continue to monitor the success of this in years to come. • We are working with Bhakra-Beas Management Board (BBMB) to test the effectiveness of the newly designed operating policies (with integrated hedging) in enhancing Pong reservoir performance with respect to its two main functions- irrigation and hydro-power generation. Official red-tape and bureaucracy in India make the exchange of data and information extremely difficult but since the project started and confidence has built up on both sides, this problem is gradually disappearing leading to better co-operation. This was quite evident at a meeting we held with stakeholders at Chandigarh in February 2018 where a large number of people from the Board turned up and made presentations that confirmed that since the completion of our project, they've since discovered that our newly developed operating policy for the Pong reservoir was far superior to the arbitrary release pattern they'd previously adopted. Indeed, given the importance they attached to the project (and the ongoing SusHi-Wat), the Chairman of the Board was also in attendance to outline the main challenges being faced by the Board in their management of the basin's water resources and to lend support to the efforts we are making to solve the problems. As a sign of his endorsement of our project, the Chairman promised that nothing again will be allowed to hinder our ability to obtain all historical data for the project. This is an unprecedented gesture in India.
First Year Of Impact 2015
Sector Agriculture, Food and Drink,Education,Energy,Environment
Impact Types Cultural,Economic,Policy & public services

 
Description MICCI flyers of project findings to disseminate to stakeholders
Geographic Reach Local/Municipal/Regional 
Policy Influence Type Implementation circular/rapid advice/letter to e.g. Ministry of Health
Impact The themed flyers summarising MICCI outcomes are prepared in English and Hindi versions and distributed to stakeholders including farmers, irrigation managers (Pong reservoir managers), engineers from state irrigation departments, NGOs working in watershed management and experts from National Institute of hydrology, IIT Roorkee and NIT Hamirpur and Kurukshetra. The list of flyers distributed are: 1. Importance of glaciers to future water resources of Beas river, India; 2.Prospects and difficulties of Indian bio-energy sector; 3. Implications of projected climate change on operation and performance of Pong reservoir, India; 4. Sedimentation in Pong reservoir, India and 5. Root water uptake and irrigation scheduling for major crops) The flyers are aimed to deliver the project findings/outcomes to relevant stakeholders, receive their feedback/comments and ultimately to create the awareness among the stakeholders about the impacts of climate change on water resources availability, agriculture, crop yield, etc., and the mitigation measures emerging from the project.
 
Description Newton Fund (managed by NERC)
Amount £59,825 (GBP)
Organisation Natural Environment Research Council 
Sector Public
Country United Kingdom
Start 12/2014 
End 06/2015
 
Description Post-doctoral and Early Career Researcher Exchanges Award (PECRE)
Amount £3,000 (GBP)
Organisation Edinburgh Research Partnership in Engineering and Mathematics (ERPem) 
Sector Academic/University
Country United Kingdom
Start 09/2014 
End 10/2014
 
Title Hydrological and water quality model simulation results for multiple locations, models and scenarios (daily time step) 
Description Hydrological and water quality model simulation results for multiple locations, models and scenarios (daily time step) simulated by WEAP model for the Beas-Sutlej river basin, India. 
Type Of Material Data analysis technique 
Year Produced 2019 
Provided To Others? Yes  
Impact Files corresponding to the final version of the model are currently part of a manuscript review process and will be uploaded by Cranfield to CRIS or CEDA once the review process is over/manuscript is accepted for your use. 
URL https://figshare.com/articles/Output_of_Beas-Sutlej_basins_systems_model/7041902/2
 
Title Model-simulated and bias-corrected daily total precipitation from a reanalysis-driven Weather Research and Forecasting simulation of the Beas and Sutlej river basins in the Himalaya, 1980 to 2012 
Description High-resolution simulations of daily precipitation over the Beas and Sutlej basins in the Himalaya from 1980 to 2012 were conducted using the Weather Research and Forecasting (WRF) model by the British Antarctic Survey, Cambridge, UK. It was shown that applying a non-linear bias-correction method to the model precipitation output resulted in much better results. The work formed part of the project 'Sustaining Himalayan Water Resources in a Changing Climate (SusHi-Wat)' during 2015 to 2018, and was funded by the UK Natural Environmental Research Council grant number NE/N015592/1. The datasets produced are necessary as accurate fine-scale estimates of precipitation over catchments in the Himalaya mountain range are required for providing input to hydrological models, as well as identifying precipitation extremes for assessing hydro-meteorological hazards. 
Type Of Material Data analysis technique 
Year Produced 2019 
Provided To Others? Yes  
Impact High-resolution simulations of daily precipitation over the Beas and Sutlej basins in the Himalaya from 1980 to 2012 were conducted using the Weather Research and Forecasting (WRF) model by the British Antarctic Survey, Cambridge, UK. It was shown that applying a non-linear bias-correction method to the model precipitation output resulted in much better results. The work formed part of the project 'Sustaining Himalayan Water Resources in a Changing Climate (SusHi-Wat)' during 2015 to 2018, and was funded by the UK Natural Environmental Research Council grant number NE/N015592/1. The datasets produced are necessary as accurate fine-scale estimates of precipitation over catchments in the Himalaya mountain range are required for providing input to hydrological models, as well as identifying precipitation extremes for assessing hydro-meteorological hazards. 
 
Title Optimal reservoir operation model 
Description Developed a reservoir simulation-genetic algorithm based optimisation framework for deriving the optimal reservoir operating policy and hedging policy for Pong reservoir in Beas River in Himachal Pradesh to improve the reservoir performance. The final output from the model is reservoir control curves, which will serve as guidance for reservoir operation. 
Type Of Material Computer model/algorithm 
Provided To Others? No  
Impact From our analysis, we found that reservoir operation using the derived rule curves improved the reservoir performance, particularly the vulnerability (maximum single period water shortage) decreased significantly. The model findings will be communicated to the Pong reservoir managers for further improvement and possible adaptation in Pong reservoir operation. 
 
Title River Beas (India) macroinvertebrate sampling 2017 
Description Macroinvertebrate kick-sampling results on the River Beas in November 2017. Additional details are available in: https://doi.org/10.3390/w10091247 This research was funded by the UK Natural Environment Research Council, grant number NE/N016394/1. 
Type Of Material Database/Collection of data 
Year Produced 2020 
Provided To Others? Yes  
Impact Data is useful for understanding ecosystem services in the Himalayan catchment, India. 
 
Title Root Water Uptake model 
Description This numerical model is developed to simulate the root water uptake for predicting soil moisture dynamics, which will be used to derive irrigation scheduling for current and future hydro-climates. The model is currently being calibrated and validated using the field experimental data that we are collecting as part of the MICCI project. 
Type Of Material Computer model/algorithm 
Provided To Others? No  
Impact Better irrigation scheduling relies on accurate estimate of soil moisture and the root water uptake model will be impactful by ensuring that scarce water is better utilised in the cultivation of the crops under investigation. The model results are part of two Journal manuscripts currently undergoing review and their ultimate publication will engender the wider visibility of both our data and the model. 
 
Title Soil moisture and crop growth data 
Description As part of MICCI, we are conducting field experiments at Roorkee (Uttarakhand), Ghazipur (Uttar Pradesh), Kurukshetra (Haryana), Hamirpur (Himachal Pradesh) to collect data on crop parameters (i.e. root depth, plant height, leaf area index, soil moisture variation in root zone), meteorological data and soil properties that influence the uptake of water by crops and hence the amount and scheduling of irrigation water. Already, high quality data have been collected over four growing seasons spanning the last 2 years on rice, wheat, maize and berseem. These data are now being used to calibrate and validate a root water uptake model for predicting soil moisture dynamics following irrigation water application. While the modelling is on-going, initial exploratory analyses involving water balance studies in the root zone have been carried with satisfactory results. 
Type Of Material Database/Collection of data 
Provided To Others? No  
Impact The field measurements of actual crop evapotranspiration and deep percolation associated with the water balance studies are providing invaluable data on these important processes that are not only important for irrigation but also for general catchment water balance and rainfall-runoff studies. In the latter respect, our work will be assisting other projects in the CWC-South Asia family and much more. Two journal papers presenting aspects of this work have recently been submitted and currently under review. 
 
Title Uncertainty analyses of climate change impacts 
Description The modelling used Monte Carlo simulation approach to develop the variability in climate change impacts on reservoir planning characteristics- capacity, performance (i.e. reliability, resilience, vulnerability and sustainability). The outcome for the first time has demonstrated the huge uncertainties that attend climate change impacts assessment, especially for the performance indices of water resources systems, and hence the caution that must be exercised when attempting to use such assessed impacts as basis of developing adaptation and mitigation measures. A technical paper that will be useful for the scientific community interested in replicating the methodology in other studies has been submitted for consideration by a high-impact factor Journal. 
Type Of Material Computer model/algorithm 
Provided To Others? No  
Impact Its subsequent use by other researchers working on climate change and its impacts on water resources. This should become realisable once the article is published. 
 
Description Global Innovation Initiative 
Organisation Indian Institute of Technology Roorkee
Country India 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution I have led the development of a research proposal that will investigate "Prediction of Plant Water Stress from Plant Physiological Indicators for farmer-friendly Irrigation Scheduling" in India. The proposal was recently submitted to the British Council GII programme and will involve, in addition to the field and theoretical aspects to the research, exchange of partners, research staff and students. Unfortunately, the application was unsuccessful and the collaboration especially with Purdue University has ceased.
Collaborator Contribution The two partners also contributed to the development of the proposal and will be leading important components of the project implementation.
Impact -
Start Year 2014
 
Description Global Innovation Initiative 
Organisation Purdue University
Country United States 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution I have led the development of a research proposal that will investigate "Prediction of Plant Water Stress from Plant Physiological Indicators for farmer-friendly Irrigation Scheduling" in India. The proposal was recently submitted to the British Council GII programme and will involve, in addition to the field and theoretical aspects to the research, exchange of partners, research staff and students. Unfortunately, the application was unsuccessful and the collaboration especially with Purdue University has ceased.
Collaborator Contribution The two partners also contributed to the development of the proposal and will be leading important components of the project implementation.
Impact -
Start Year 2014
 
Description Heriot-Watt University and Gazi University (Turkey) on reservoir planning and operation. 
Organisation Gazi University
Country Turkey 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution A PhD research scholar, Mr Murat Pinarlik, from Gazi University Turkey was on a 9-month (Feb - Nov. 2019) study exchange visit that was funded by the Scientific and Technological Council of Turkey, Directorate of Science Fellowships and Grant Programmes (BIDEB). During this period, he worked on the modelling of reservoir systems using the well-behaved reservoir simulation tools that have been developed in my research group and data of 7 Turkish reservoirs. This work, as I have been made to understand has been adjudged by Mr Milarlik's supervisor as constituting a major component of his PhD thesis.I was approached by e-mail to accept Mr Pinarlik for this placement based on recognition of my world-leading research work on reservoir systems planning and operation.
Collaborator Contribution The entire 9-month exchange programme for Mr Pinarlik was fully funded by the Turkish BIDEB Award. Without this award, the exchange will not have been possible. Built into the award are fully funded visits to Heriot-Watt University by Dr Shankar and my reciprocating visit to NIT-Hamirpur. The data obtained by Mr Pinarlik through the Turkish Republic General Directorate of State Hydraulic Works and which he used for the development of his models are valuable resources that will contribute to the research in my group on the further understanding of the fundamental behaviour of reservoir systems. Also, as I noted earlier, the assessors of Mr Pinarlik at Gazi University have deemed the work done with me during the attachment as fully complementing that already done to the extent that he can now commence producing his PhD thesis. Finally, Mr Pinarlik has produced a Journal manuscript which is currently being reviewed. The plan is to develop more manuscripts for joint publication.
Impact 1.Manuscript under review 2.Presentation at the Roorkee Water Conclave, 26 - 28 February 2020
Start Year 2019
 
Description Heriot-Watt University and INAIGEM (Peru) on water resources modelling 
Organisation Government of Peru
Department Glaciers and Ecosystems Research National Institute
Country Peru 
Sector Public 
PI Contribution The collaboration relates to a funded research on the impact of climate change on glaciers and water resources security in Peru. I'm a UK co-Investigator on the project with responsibility for developing improved operating policies for water resources infrastructure in Peru to be used as part of the WEAP modelling. INAIGEM are charged with the development of the WEAP model. I am contributing the experience gained in India through SusHi-Wat and MICCI on reservoir operation and optimisation. The INAIGEM researcher developing the WEAP model will be visiting the UK in April during which she will spend some time with me in Edinburgh.
Collaborator Contribution The partners are developing the WEAP model which will form the basis for testing robust adaptation measures for combating any water security challenges that may result from the simulations in future time horizons.
Impact None yet.
Start Year 2019
 
Description SusHi-Wat: Grant application to the Newton-Bhabha funding 
Organisation British Antarctic Survey
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution This new research collaboration application led by me (Prof Adeloye) has proposed a research project to investigate the development of tools and management practices for the sustainability of Himalayan water resources in a changing climate. It's in response to the Newton-Bhabha funding initiative by UK-NERC and India-MoES. I coordinated the development of the application and will be the lead PI. The application was successful and officially commenced in April 2016. As the lead-PI, I'm providing the overall leadership for the implementation of the project, in addition to being in-charge of a number of work packages. Additionally,given that SusHi-Wat is part of the wider Sustainable Water Resources (SWR) Programme of the NERC, I'm responsible for ensuring that SusHi-Wat works closely and effectively with the other two projects in the programme (CHANSE and UPSCAPE) for the successful delivery of the programme aims.
Collaborator Contribution They provided the methodological approach to specific work packages of the proposal and are now co-leading the implementation of these work programmes.
Impact The collaboration has led to the successful award of SusHi-Wat, a multi-disciplinary involving hydrologists, water resources engineers, ecologists, environmental scientists, climate modellers, glacial and agricultural specialists. The p[roject implementation is resulting in several manuscripts that are currently undergoing review. Apart from these SusHi-Wat specific outputs, we have also developed a flyer for the SWR programme, which briefly describes the aim and objectives of each of the three component projects within the programme. This flyer was officially launched at the mid-term review meeting held in Pune, India on 21-22 February, and which was attended by representatives of the Indian and UK funders as well as other stakeholders.
Start Year 2015
 
Description SusHi-Wat: Grant application to the Newton-Bhabha funding 
Organisation Cranfield University
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution This new research collaboration application led by me (Prof Adeloye) has proposed a research project to investigate the development of tools and management practices for the sustainability of Himalayan water resources in a changing climate. It's in response to the Newton-Bhabha funding initiative by UK-NERC and India-MoES. I coordinated the development of the application and will be the lead PI. The application was successful and officially commenced in April 2016. As the lead-PI, I'm providing the overall leadership for the implementation of the project, in addition to being in-charge of a number of work packages. Additionally,given that SusHi-Wat is part of the wider Sustainable Water Resources (SWR) Programme of the NERC, I'm responsible for ensuring that SusHi-Wat works closely and effectively with the other two projects in the programme (CHANSE and UPSCAPE) for the successful delivery of the programme aims.
Collaborator Contribution They provided the methodological approach to specific work packages of the proposal and are now co-leading the implementation of these work programmes.
Impact The collaboration has led to the successful award of SusHi-Wat, a multi-disciplinary involving hydrologists, water resources engineers, ecologists, environmental scientists, climate modellers, glacial and agricultural specialists. The p[roject implementation is resulting in several manuscripts that are currently undergoing review. Apart from these SusHi-Wat specific outputs, we have also developed a flyer for the SWR programme, which briefly describes the aim and objectives of each of the three component projects within the programme. This flyer was officially launched at the mid-term review meeting held in Pune, India on 21-22 February, and which was attended by representatives of the Indian and UK funders as well as other stakeholders.
Start Year 2015
 
Description SusHi-Wat: Grant application to the Newton-Bhabha funding 
Organisation Indian Institute of Science Bangalore
Country India 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution This new research collaboration application led by me (Prof Adeloye) has proposed a research project to investigate the development of tools and management practices for the sustainability of Himalayan water resources in a changing climate. It's in response to the Newton-Bhabha funding initiative by UK-NERC and India-MoES. I coordinated the development of the application and will be the lead PI. The application was successful and officially commenced in April 2016. As the lead-PI, I'm providing the overall leadership for the implementation of the project, in addition to being in-charge of a number of work packages. Additionally,given that SusHi-Wat is part of the wider Sustainable Water Resources (SWR) Programme of the NERC, I'm responsible for ensuring that SusHi-Wat works closely and effectively with the other two projects in the programme (CHANSE and UPSCAPE) for the successful delivery of the programme aims.
Collaborator Contribution They provided the methodological approach to specific work packages of the proposal and are now co-leading the implementation of these work programmes.
Impact The collaboration has led to the successful award of SusHi-Wat, a multi-disciplinary involving hydrologists, water resources engineers, ecologists, environmental scientists, climate modellers, glacial and agricultural specialists. The p[roject implementation is resulting in several manuscripts that are currently undergoing review. Apart from these SusHi-Wat specific outputs, we have also developed a flyer for the SWR programme, which briefly describes the aim and objectives of each of the three component projects within the programme. This flyer was officially launched at the mid-term review meeting held in Pune, India on 21-22 February, and which was attended by representatives of the Indian and UK funders as well as other stakeholders.
Start Year 2015
 
Description SusHi-Wat: Grant application to the Newton-Bhabha funding 
Organisation Indian Institute of Technology Roorkee
Country India 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution This new research collaboration application led by me (Prof Adeloye) has proposed a research project to investigate the development of tools and management practices for the sustainability of Himalayan water resources in a changing climate. It's in response to the Newton-Bhabha funding initiative by UK-NERC and India-MoES. I coordinated the development of the application and will be the lead PI. The application was successful and officially commenced in April 2016. As the lead-PI, I'm providing the overall leadership for the implementation of the project, in addition to being in-charge of a number of work packages. Additionally,given that SusHi-Wat is part of the wider Sustainable Water Resources (SWR) Programme of the NERC, I'm responsible for ensuring that SusHi-Wat works closely and effectively with the other two projects in the programme (CHANSE and UPSCAPE) for the successful delivery of the programme aims.
Collaborator Contribution They provided the methodological approach to specific work packages of the proposal and are now co-leading the implementation of these work programmes.
Impact The collaboration has led to the successful award of SusHi-Wat, a multi-disciplinary involving hydrologists, water resources engineers, ecologists, environmental scientists, climate modellers, glacial and agricultural specialists. The p[roject implementation is resulting in several manuscripts that are currently undergoing review. Apart from these SusHi-Wat specific outputs, we have also developed a flyer for the SWR programme, which briefly describes the aim and objectives of each of the three component projects within the programme. This flyer was officially launched at the mid-term review meeting held in Pune, India on 21-22 February, and which was attended by representatives of the Indian and UK funders as well as other stakeholders.
Start Year 2015
 
Description SusHi-Wat: Grant application to the Newton-Bhabha funding 
Organisation National Institute of Technology, Hamirpur
Country India 
Sector Private 
PI Contribution This new research collaboration application led by me (Prof Adeloye) has proposed a research project to investigate the development of tools and management practices for the sustainability of Himalayan water resources in a changing climate. It's in response to the Newton-Bhabha funding initiative by UK-NERC and India-MoES. I coordinated the development of the application and will be the lead PI. The application was successful and officially commenced in April 2016. As the lead-PI, I'm providing the overall leadership for the implementation of the project, in addition to being in-charge of a number of work packages. Additionally,given that SusHi-Wat is part of the wider Sustainable Water Resources (SWR) Programme of the NERC, I'm responsible for ensuring that SusHi-Wat works closely and effectively with the other two projects in the programme (CHANSE and UPSCAPE) for the successful delivery of the programme aims.
Collaborator Contribution They provided the methodological approach to specific work packages of the proposal and are now co-leading the implementation of these work programmes.
Impact The collaboration has led to the successful award of SusHi-Wat, a multi-disciplinary involving hydrologists, water resources engineers, ecologists, environmental scientists, climate modellers, glacial and agricultural specialists. The p[roject implementation is resulting in several manuscripts that are currently undergoing review. Apart from these SusHi-Wat specific outputs, we have also developed a flyer for the SWR programme, which briefly describes the aim and objectives of each of the three component projects within the programme. This flyer was officially launched at the mid-term review meeting held in Pune, India on 21-22 February, and which was attended by representatives of the Indian and UK funders as well as other stakeholders.
Start Year 2015
 
Description 3rd Indus Basin Knowledge Forum 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Professional Practitioners
Results and Impact This workshop held at IIASA in Vienna Austria (31 May - 2 June) was the third in a series workshops addressing water stress in the Indus Basin. I was nominated for the Workshop by the UKRI-NERC as a way of showcasing the ongoing SusHi-Wat research that is addressing water management issues in the Indus Basin. The Workshop featured oral presentations, keynote speeches and discussions in plenary and break-out sessions. Two Posters reporting on SusHi-Wat were mounted and discussed at the event. It was also a useful occasion of meeting and interacting with others working on water management issues in the Indus. A final report on the Workshop had since been produced (see the url below).
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2018
URL http://www.iiasa.ac.at/web/home/research/iswel/180529-IndusWorkshop.html
 
Description Attending Roorkee Water Conclave 2020 at Roorkee, India, 26 - 28 February 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Professional Practitioners
Results and Impact The Conclave was the first of its kind organised jointly by IIT-Roorkee and NIH-Roorkee who incidentally are collaborating research organisations for SusHi-Wat. As an international event, delegates came from virtually all the 6 Continents of the world and it was therefore an appropriate event to showcase the main findings of SusHi-Wat for maximum impact. Four presentations on different aspects of SusHi-Wat were made and discussed at the meeting. These covered the simulated impacts of climate and socio-economic changes on Himalayan water resources and ecosystem services, and the outcomes of carefully tested adaptation measures for coping with these. Given that the presentations were organised in different parallel sessions, the range of people getting to know about the project was "multiplied". Discussions with other attendees focused on possible future collaboration on climate change in India and elsewhere and follow-up on these approaches are being undertaken.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2020
URL https://www.iitr.ac.in/rwc2020/
 
Description Attending Water Future conference at Bangalore, India 24 - 28 September 2019 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Professional Practitioners
Results and Impact SusHi-Wat delegates presented their research findings at the Water Future Conference, which was held at Bangalore, India at which a side event for SusHi-Wat was also held. The side event represented the formal ending of the UKRI-NERC Sustainable Water Resources (SWR) Programme of which SusHi-Wat is a component project.

Presentations included:
1. "Water security assessment under effects of climate and socio-economic changes in the Beas-Sutlej river basin, India" (Poster presentation by Dau, PDRA at H-WU at the side event);
2. "Current & future state of ecosystem services in the Sutlej-Beas" (Poster presentation by Momblanch, PDRA at Cranfield University at the side event). This poster won the runner-up prize at the event; and
3. "Assessment of sediment yield and erosion rate in a mountain river basin of the Northern Himalayas, India using RUSLE and GIS" (Poster presentation by Gupta Doctoral scholar at IIT-Roorkee at the side event).

Additionally, an oral paper "Nexus modelling to inform robust water management climate change adaptation" was presented by Momblanch at the main Water Future event.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2019
 
Description Final project meeting in Roorkee, India 24-26 February, 2020 
Form Of Engagement Activity A formal working group, expert panel or dialogue
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Professional Practitioners
Results and Impact This was the finale Workshop involving all investigators (India and UK) and invited stakeholders. Over the two days, the investigators took stock of the stage of the project and presentations were made on different aspects focusing on the detailed process modelling and the adaptation strategies. Some investigators from the UK could not attend in person due to circumstances beyond their control but they participated by Skype.

Following the review of the objectives of the study and accomplishments, it was generally agreed that the project had achieved what had been outlined in the original aim and objectives. Discussions then centred around the production of the Final Project Report as required by the Indian Funders (MoES) and the updating of Researchfish for the UK investigators. Format for the Indian Funder's report was agreed and tasks were appropriately assigned to ensure that the report becomes ready and is delivered by the official end-date of the Project, which 14 April 2020. Discussions were also held about follow-on projects although without any knowledge about future India-UK collaboration agenda, nothing concrete was agreed other to request partners to be on the look out for any Announcement of Opportunities.

A notable impact is the invitation extended to SusHi-Wat to be showcased at the IUKWC Stakeholders engagement event being planned for April 2020 at UP, India. The idea is to exhibit the main findings of the project in the Indus Himalayan as a template for addressing similar issues in equally strategic River Basins of India. SusHi-Wat have accepted the invitation and the initial plan is the project will be represented by the 2-person limit imposed by IUKWC but personal communication with the IUKWC representative at the Roorkee Water Conclave is that this limit will be relaxed to allow Professor Adeloye to attend as a third participant to discuss the reservoir operation aspects of SusHi-Wat.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2020
URL https://iukwc.org/user-engagement-initiatives
 
Description MICCI Project Meeting (Hamirpur) 2013 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? Yes
Type Of Presentation keynote/invited speaker
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Professional Practitioners
Results and Impact Boat tour of the Pong lake involving the project team; photographs of dam structure, spillway, outlet facilities; collection of map showing Pong facilities and canals; tour of the hydro-power turbine installations; conducted visit to the generation control room.

NIT Hamirpur is one of the Indian partners of MICCI and part of their involvement is the field experimentation with the crops being studied for the project. The second phase of the planting had just been completed and the lead PI from the UK used the opportunity to visit the experimental farm near Hamirpur, India and to discuss with the local farmer tending the fields.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2013
 
Description MICCI project Inception Workshop (Roorkee, India) 
Form Of Engagement Activity A formal working group, expert panel or dialogue
Part Of Official Scheme? Yes
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Other academic audiences (collaborators, peers etc.)
Results and Impact The workshop provided the space for interaction with the stakeholders from the state irrigation department, scientists from National Institute of Hydrology, Roorkee and Faculty members from Indian Institute of Technology Roorkee, which provided the information about the existing issues in the study area.

We were able to identify reliable sources for the relevant hydrological and meteorological data that will be used in our analyses and plans were developed for obtaining these.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2012
URL http://web.sbe.hw.ac.uk/sites/micci/
 
Description NERC (UK)-MoES (India) CWC Project 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Professional Practitioners
Results and Impact As part of the NERC-MoES Finale Workshop for the Changing Water Cycle Programme held in New Delhi (May 16-17, 2016), Professor Adeloye presented two talks one forecasting on the technical details of MICCI meant for the experts and the second which was less technical and meant for the non-experts. In addition to the investigators in the CWC programme, the event was also attended by officials from relevant government departments including Ministry of Water Resources, MoES, IMD and academics from various institutions in India.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2016
URL https://www.ceh.ac.uk/sites/default/files/Future%20Ganga%20Workshop%20-%20Adebayo%20Adeloye%20-%20He...
 
Description Newton -Bhabha Scoping Workshop 
Form Of Engagement Activity A formal working group, expert panel or dialogue
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach National
Primary Audience Professional Practitioners
Results and Impact MICCI project team both from the UK and India participated in the Newton-Bhabha Scoping workshop on "Sustaining Water Resources for Food, Energy and Ecosystem Services in India" in Bangalore (11-12 March 2015) and provided valuable inputs for the forthcoming programme.

Many workshop participants both From the UK and India showed interest in MICCI's work which resulted in wider discussions.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2015
 
Description Presenting research findings at IUGG General Assembly, 8 - 18 July 2019, Montreal, Canada 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Professional Practitioners
Results and Impact Professor Adeloye gave an oral presentation on "Enhancement of reservoir performance through integrated operation", which was discussed at the Session. He and Dau also participated in discussing other presentations made at the symposium. Attending the event was also Dr Kasi who previously worked with Professor Adeloye as a PDRA on the project but who is now an Associate Professor at IIT-Roorkee. This afforded the opportunity to discuss with Kasi the implementation of our collaborative project that has been sponsored under the Indian Government Scheme for Promotion of Academic and Research Collaboration (SPARC). The news of top-up funding to the Professor Adeloye (the UK Partner on the project) by UKERI to sponsor the exchange of faculty and students between the UK and India also came during the Montreal symposium. Initial ideas about how the exchanges will be implemented were discussed at the Montreal meeting.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2019
URL http://iugg2019montreal.com/index.html
 
Description Project Progress Meeting 2013 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? Yes
Type Of Presentation keynote/invited speaker
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Professional Practitioners
Results and Impact The progress report was shared with other CWC project teams, Scientists from MoES and other stakeholders; we also received constructive feedback from them.

Getting to know investigators working on other strands of the CWC (South Asia) programme and discussing the possibility of sharing information/data; getting to voice concerns about difficulties in obtaining runoff data and seeing this problem taken up at a more strategic level by the UK-NERC with their MOES counterparts; establishing new links and forging possible future collaborations.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2013
 
Description Stakeholders' workshop at Hamirpur and Roorkee, India (5-7 June 2015) 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? Yes
Geographic Reach Regional
Primary Audience Public/other audiences
Results and Impact At Hamirpur workshop, participants appreciated the MICCI work, and extending the work to other similar river basins in the northern region of India was suggested by Pong reservoir managers.
At Roorkee, the workshop was well received by the participants and, as suggested by the president of Indian farmers association, Mr. Bhullan Singh who presided over the workshop, two follow-up meetings will be organised at their villages in June and July 2015. These will be coordinated by the Indian MICCI partners, headed by Prof CSP Ojha (Indian PI of MICCI).
A highlight of both Workshops was the distribution of fact-sheets on the projects to the participants. Each of the work packages had 2-side A4 fact-sheet with information in English on side and its Hindi translation on the other.This was widely commended by the stakeholders especially the local farmers who remarked that this was unprecedented. Copies of the fact-sheets were also made available to the NERC for exhibition at Prime Minister Modi visit to the UK in late 2015!


After the presentations, the project's fact sheets prepared in both Hindi and English and made available to all participants sparked further discussions among some of the stakeholders who were happy that for the first time, they were able to read the outcome of a scientific research in the language they understood. They were asked to further disseminate the message among their members who could not attend and for this, they have requested for more copies of the fact sheets to be made available a
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2015
URL http://www.fcerm.net/
 
Description Visit of Indian stakeholders to study UK irrigated agriculture activities in East Anglia Region. 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? Yes
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Professional Practitioners
Results and Impact After the visit, the Indian visitors were convinced that they had learnt something that would help in their attempts to effectively apply irrigation water in India.

After the visit, I have received similar requests from the Indian PI for MICCI on arranging a similar visit for other stakeholders, especially those who for logistical reasons were unable to make the trip to the UK. This underscores the perceived benefits/impacts that the practical workshop and visit have had.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2014
 
Description Visit of Project Investigators (Indian and UK) to study UK irrigated agriculture, 24 - 26 June 2019 
Form Of Engagement Activity A formal working group, expert panel or dialogue
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Study participants or study members
Results and Impact This 3-day study tour to the UK conducted by UK Irrigation Association Consultant and based at Peterborough offered first-hand experience of how agricultural irrigation is planned, practiced, and managed in the UK and particularly its importance in delivering high yields and quality produce into the UK and European food supply chain.The 3-day programme was designed to improve participants' knowledge of UK irrigation farm production systems, how irrigation water is regulated, how water resources and drainage are regulated, how produce is marketed from field to fork, and how innovations in irrigation technology are improving food production and food quality. This was facilitated by visits to a number of commercial farms in the Anglian region of England. The last day of the tour was devoted to a meeting of the project investigators, both Indian and UK, held at Cranfield University and featured presentations on the progress of the project. The seminar was attended by a number of postgraduate students, interested academics at Cranfield University. The planning of the finale Stakeholders Workshop to be held in India in February 2020 was begun at the meeting.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2019
URL https://www.egis.hw.ac.uk/sushiwat/visit-of-indian-delegation-to-study-uk-irrigated-agriculture/
 
Description Visit to Pong Dam hydropower station and irrigation infrastructures-Beas River (Hamirpur) 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? Yes
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Participants in your research and patient groups
Results and Impact The visit to the Pong dam, whose catchment constitutes the main focus of the hydrological and water resources analyses in MICCI, enabled me and other project team from the UK to appreciate the setting of this major water resources facility and its strategic status for the economic well-being of the two northern Indian states- Punjab and Himachal Pradesh- it serves. We also used the opportunity to discuss with the dam/reservoir operators, collect data/background information and to take photographs.

Better knowledge of the water resources system that assisted in the subsequent modelling and other analyses tasks.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2013
 
Description Visit to Upper Ganga Canal and farmers at Roorkee and Kurkshetra 2012 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? Yes
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Professional Practitioners
Results and Impact The visit to the Ganga Canal, whose catchment was initially being considered for the hydrological and water resources analyses in MICCI, enabled me and other project team from the UK to appreciate the importance of the canal for the allocation of irrigation water to farmers in Uttarakhand. However, while the knowledge gained was helpful, subsequent difficulties in securing the "classified" runoff data for the Ganga meant that we had to shelve the idea of analysing the great Ganga system. The visit to the farms also enabled us to discuss the needs of the farmers in terms of irrigation water management which helped in shaping the subsequent research.

Better knowledge of the study area and more importantly the local irrigation practices and the needs of the farmers.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2012
 
Description Visiting Professorship to China Agricultural University 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Professional Practitioners
Results and Impact My appointment as visiting Professor by the China Agricultural University (CAU) was in recognition of my internationally leading research work in water management, notably the UKRI-NERC research work in India, which the authorities at the CAU saw as something that will be useful for addressing the water management challenges in China. Apart from my interactions with academics and research students at the Centre for Water Management during which I reviewed and submitted joint manuscripts, a workshop was held at the University's Shiyanghe Experimental Station over 2 days discussing challenges of water management in irrigation and ways by which my Indian research could be applied.

I also delivered lectures to PhD and advanced Masters students on evapotranspiration modelling and measurements. The collaboration is leading to several joint publications and request for advice from both academics and students at the CAU
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2018
 
Description Workshop on Climate Change: Science, Engineering and Economics of Water Resources Management (Roorkee, India) 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? Yes
Type Of Presentation keynote/invited speaker
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Professional Practitioners
Results and Impact Following the presentation, I was swarmed by IIT-R students enquiring about the possibility of undertaking their graduate/research degrees studies at heriot-Watt University. The presentation also led to requests for copies of the full paper of my presentation, request for possible research collaboration and invitations from academics at other Indian HEIs who had attended the Workshop to me to visit their institutions to give talks and teach.

Establishing new contacts with Indian Academics; engendering strong interest from Indian prospective students in UK research degrees programmes.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2012
URL http://web.sbe.hw.ac.uk/sites/micci/