The Indus River Basin as an Emergent GardenThe Indus River Basin as an Emergent Garden James L....

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The Indus River Basin as an Emergent Garden James L. Wescoat Jr., Aga Khan Program for Islamic Architecture, MIT – LUMS Indus Conference – 29 January 2017

Transcript of The Indus River Basin as an Emergent GardenThe Indus River Basin as an Emergent Garden James L....

The Indus River Basin as an Emergent Garden

James L. Wescoat Jr., Aga Khan Program for Islamic Architecture, MIT – LUMS Indus Conference – 29 January 2017

Problem Statement

• Late-20th c. concepts of Indus water management:

– “Indus Waters”

– “Great Indus food machine”

– “Indus Basin Irrigation System” (IBIS)

– “Integrated Water Resources Management” (IWRM)

– “Water-energy-food nexus”

– “Political economies & political ecologies”

• Something seems to be missing …

• The Indus River Basin as a Garden?

Paper Outline

GARDEN CONCEPTS

1. Mughal gardens -----------------

2. Colonial gardens -----------------

3. Late 20th c. garden research --& conservation

4. 21st c. “gardens” ---------------

WATER CONCEPTS

Mughal waterworks & subahs

Colonial irrigation landscapes

Indus Basin development, modeling & management

21st c. Indus River basin regionalism & placemaking

1. Early Mughal Gardens & Waterworks

Kallar Kahar, Salt Range

Kamran’s Baradari, Lahore

Scales of Garden Ideology in Mughal Culture

Mughal garden sites and spatial metaphors Babur laying out the Bagh-i wafa near Jalalabad

Mughal Subahs – late 16th c.

Indus subahs

“My Garden is Hindustan!” (Ebba Koch, 2007)

Revenue Survey of the Mughal Empire, ~1595 CE

Map: Shireen Moosvi

Political Economy of Mughal CultivationSources: Irfan Habib, Agrarian System of Mughal India (1999); Shireen Moosvi, Economy of

the Mughal Empire, c. 1595 (1987); Panniker et al. (2002); and related essays.

1. Agricultural production: 2/3 of GNP from agriculture (higher yields in 1600 than 1872). Mainly well irrigation.

3. Population: 145 million (~22 million urban)

2. Land revenue: tax = 50% of gross production; (~30% needed for food, leaving a margin of ~20%).

4. Local claims to agricultural surplus: zamindari; rich peasants; farm labourers & intra-family transfers.•

Mughal Watercourse & Landscape Maps

Mughal map of the Indus & its Tributaries Painted map of irrigation canal landscape

Sultanate &Mughal Canalson the Plains

Sultanate canals

Mughal canals [Ali Mardan Khan and others].

Well & floodplain farming.

After Habib, 1982

The Shift Northwest in late-16th c. Mughal Garden Events

Kashmir & Lake Dal as a Regional Garden

Mughal Gardens & Canals at the Urban Scale

Shalamar Bagh

Mian Mir complex

ShahNahr

Gardens & Waterworksin Historical Texts

Gardens & Rivers in Mughal Poetic Manuscripts

“It’s a Day for the Garden” -- Mahesh “A Sinner’s Plea before God” -- Sadi

Mian Mir shrine area with gardens and waterworks

Part 2. Intersections between Colonial Gardens & Canal Irrigation

“Hindoostan divided into Soubahs according to the Ayeen Ackbaree,” R. Wilkinson, 1815

Irrigated Gardens & Landscapes of the Indus

Alexander Burnes, Memoir on the Indus, 1830s Sketch map of canals 1850s

Company Baghs & Cantonment Gardens

Company Garden, Sheikhupura Company Bagh, Saharanpur

Contributions of theAgri-Horticultural Society of the Punjab

Agri-Horticultural Society of the Punjab

• On Tree Planting in the Punjab – proposed tree & shrub plantings along canals and roads.

• Agriculture in the Punjab – some references to irrigation and gardens in district reports.

• Horticulture in the Punjab – more references to gardens in district reports.

• Wool and Silk manufactures – high-value products

• On Plant Introductions – collection & testing.

Edenic Analogies & Reclamation Ethics

Part III: Indus River, Indus Basin, Indus River Basin, Indus Waters

1960

Brief references to gardens in the Indus Waters Treaty of 1960

National Basin Modeling: Water, Climate, Energy & Food Security Planning

WB Indus Basin Model Agroclimatic Zones & Canal Commands

Applications of the Indus Basin Model:From Development to Management

Indus Basin Management: Toward “Principled Pragmatism”

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Estimated Pumpage Irrigated Area

Decreasing surface water supplies have led to increased ground water pumping Increased energy input for irrigated agriculture.

Further Developments: Water-Energy-Food NexusBridging the Water Supply Gap with Pumped Water

Electric Pumps (2008-09) Diesel Pumps (2008-09)

1 Dot = 100 Pumps

Return to Groundwater & Conjunctive Water Management

Linking Energy Intensity with Water Use Efficiency

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Food Crops Cash Crops Edible Oilseeds Vegetables Fruits Pulses

Source: Agricultural Statistics of Pakisan

Food in the Water-Energy-Agriculture Nexus

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And Horticulture: Fruits and vegetables show

exponential growth in production in Punjab

Particularly, with precision land leveling, watercourse lining, drip irrigation, grading & marketing.

Future work: Integrated systems dynamics modeling of water, energy, crop production, nutrition & equity

Something still seems to be missing …

Part IV. Synthesis and Prospect: Selected Qualities of Gardens & Gardening Relevant for the Indus

– Care (riʻāyat) for land, plants, animals & people

– Dignity (waqr) of cultivation and (cultivators

– Balance (mizan) & harmony

– Gratitude (shukr) & patience

– Good works (khairat) & sharing

– Beauty (bahar), order, diversity & composition in a garden

– Signs (ayat) in this world

IV. Synthesis and Prospect: The Indus Basin as a Garden Reconsidered

Upper Indus Waterworks and Gardens

Kreutzmann, 2000

Irrigated Gardens on the Plains

IV. Synthesis and Prospect: The Indus Basin as an Emergent Garden

SRI – System of Rice Intensification – substitution of labor & care

Meeting Plant Water Requirements w/o WasteETlandscape = ETreference * Kcspecies * Kcdensity * Kcmicroclimate

Irrigation Losses and Gains: IE: Assume 50% irrigation efficiency for a “new mali”RH: Assume 80% rainwater harvesting efficiency

Sheesh Mahal Water Requirement Example:Irrigation depth = [(2000mm * 0.5 * 1.0 * 0.75)-310mm]/0.5 = 880 mm/yrIrrigation volume = (0.88 m * 400 m2)-42m3 = 310 m3/yr

IV. Synthesis and Prospect: The Indus Basin as an Emergent Garden

Paraphrasing Dr. Abubakr Muhammad: Imagine how a gardener meticulously takes care of plants. Such attention to detail on a vast,

basin-wide scale is possible with water informatics and related water technologies … values, policies, and politics.