UNDP - United Nations Development Programme Nepal

10/09/2024 | News release | Archived content

An ancient water system in Sri Lanka offers a blueprint for climate resilience

Drive five hours north of the capital, Colombo, and the air hangs dry with a sun that seems to scorch just about anything it touches. The so-called Dry Zone is the agricultural heartland of Sri Lanka where life revolves around a single, most-precious resource: water.

For decades, farming communities here have looked to the skies waiting for the rains to break droughts, or lamenting lost harvests destroyed by floods. Now climate change is bringing cascading and devastating social impacts, entrenching generations of rural communities in cycles of poverty and debt. Speak to farmers in the area and the conversation will undoubtedly turn to water.

The recent Multidimensional Vulnerability Index report, co-published by UNDP and the Oxford Poverty and Human Development Initiative, reveals a stark reality: more than half the population (55.7 percent) in Sri Lanka - about 12.3 million people - experience multidimensional vulnerability. For more than a third of the country, lack of access to water means a daily struggle. Its impact is most acute in the Dry Zone, with communities struggling to meet their daily needs, support livelihoods and protect nature as a resource.

It wasn't always this way. Sri Lanka's Dry Zonewas once home to a sophisticated civilization that thrived on a hydraulic-based system, an ancient irrigation network designed to manage alternating wet and dry seasons. The intricate "cascade system" a framework of interconnected reservoirs, ensured a delicate balance between communities and their environment, making the region a thriving agricultural hub.

Over the past two centuries, however, neglect and degradation of the system upended this delicate balance, disrupting the flow of water and leaving communities exposed to the worsening impacts of climate change. Unsustainable agricultural practices, such as over-cultivation, improper land use, and the clearing of forests, have severely degraded the environment in the Dry Zone. These practices have disrupted natural water cycles, reduced soil fertility, and eroded the once-vibrant landscape, making it even more vulnerable to the worsening impacts of climate change. Today, they face a myriad of challenges to their livelihoods, health, and food security, making resilience to climate change more critical than ever.

So, what is the solution?

The Climate Resilient Integrated Water Management Project (CRIWMP) financed by the Green Climate Fund is a nature-based, home-grown approach to addressing climate risks in vulnerable communities like the Dry Zone. Implemented by the Government of Sri Lanka, with support from UNDP, it is reviving the old irrigation systems in three river basins of Mee Oya, Yan Oya and the Malwathu Oya.

Now in its seventh year, the impacts are tangible. The project has adopted a community-based approach, engaging men, women, and youth, in its implementation, turning communities into active partners in decision-making and empowering them to take charge of their own development.