Drip Irrigation vs Flood Irrigation: Which Saves More Money for Indian Farmers?
Water is becoming costly, electricity is limited, and farming margins are shrinking.
Yet many farmers still use flood irrigation, losing both water and money.
Let’s clearly compare Drip Irrigation vs Flood Irrigation in simple Indian farming terms.
What Is Flood Irrigation?
Flood irrigation means:
Water is released openly into the field
Large quantity wasted through evaporation & runoff
Uneven watering of crops
Problems with Flood Irrigation
Disadvantages:
40–60% water wastage
Higher electricity cost
Weed growth increases
Soil nutrients wash away
What Is Drip Irrigation?
Drip irrigation supplies water directly to plant roots through pipes and emitters.
Benefits of Drip Irrigation
- Saves 50–70% water
- Reduces power consumption
- Faster crop growth
- Higher yield per acre
- Works well even with low borewell water
Cost Comparison (Per Acre – Approximate)
Factor. Flood Irrigation. Drip Irrigation
Water usage. Very High. Very Low
Power cost. High. Low
Initial cost. Low. Medium
Long-term savings. No. Yes
Yield increase. No. Yes 20–40%
Drip pays back its cost within 2–3 years.
Crops Where Drip Works Best
Vegetables (Tomato, Chilli, Onion)
Fruits (Banana, Papaya, Pomegranate)
Commercial crops (Cotton, Sugarcane)
Drumstick & flowers
🏛 Government Subsidy (Big Advantage)
Indian farmers can get 40–80% subsidy on drip irrigation under:
PMKSY
State horticulture departments
Always apply through official agriculture office.
Final Verdict
If water is plenty → Flood may work (short term)
If water is limited → Drip irrigation is the smartest investment
Future farming belongs to water-efficient farmers.
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