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Brazil

Source: FAO-Forestry. Disclaimer.
Version: 2000
Geography and population
The country is politically divided into twenty-six states and one
federal district, in five regions: north, northeast, southeast, south and centre-west. The
total area of the country is 854.7 million ha, out of which the extension of cultivated
land area was 49.1 million ha in 1996. A large amount of land is still available for
further agricultural production, especially in the centre-west of the country in the
so-called "cerrado" areas. The annual population growth in the 1997/98 was close
to 1.3 percent. The average population density varies according to region: the north has
3.3 inhab./km², the northeast 29.8, the southeast 73.8, the south 41.0 and the
centre-west 6.76 inhab./km².
Agriculture in the 1980s played a significant role in the country's
economy, but no longer did a single crop dominate in the way sugar, coffee or rubber had
at their peaks. Between 1980 and 1992 farm output grew (38 percent) more rapidly than
population (26 percent). In the mid-l990s Brazil was the world's largest producer of
coffee and sugar (from sugar cane), second among the cocoa producers, fourth among tobacco
growers, and sixth in cotton growing. Under the various programmes undertaken in the last
two decades to promote diversification of crops, the production of grains has grown
consistently, including wheat, rice, maize and particularly soybeans. Forest products,
especially rubber (once a vital element in Brazilian exports), as well as Brazil nuts,
cashews, waxes and fibres, now come mostly from cultivated plantations and no longer from
wild forest trees as in earlier days. Thanks to its wide climatic range, Brazil produces
almost every kind of fruit, from tropical varieties in the north (various nuts and
avocados) to citrus fruit and grapes in the temperate regions of the south.
In March 1991, the Southern Common Market (MERCOSUL) was created when
Brazil, Argentina, Paraguay and Uruguay signed the Treaty of Asunción. The trade pact
took effect as a customs union and partial free-trade zone in January 1995. The aim of
MERCOSUL is to allow for the free movement of capital, labour and services among the four
countries. With the introduction in July 1994 of a new currency, the real, the annual
inflation rate fell from 5 136 percent (1993-1994) to 31.1 percent (1994-1995), and all
quantitative restrictions to trade were eliminated. The GDP in 1997 was 820.3 US$ thousand
million, with 13 percent due to the agricultural sector.
Climate, Water Resources and Water Use
Climate
Brazil has a very wide diversification of climate. The
agro-climatic regions with their characteristics are described in the following table and
their implications for irrigation are explained below.
(i) The south is below the Tropic of Capricorn in the temperate
zone, with cool, relatively dry winters and warm, relatively moist summers. It has two
well defined characteristics: one is its homogeneous rainfall within the region and the
other is the uniform climate, the prevalance of the mesotermic climate. Due to frost,
there are few opportunities for out-of-season winter irrigation, and although
supplementary summer irrigation can save farmers from crop failures in a dry year, on
average it gives only a small increase over the rainfed yields of the typical summer crops
of the south: maize, beans and soybean. It has a highly developed, commercially-oriented
agriculture which both large and small farmers share. As a result, irrigation development
in the south has instead focused mainly on summer flooding of lowlands for rice production
(Rio Grande do Sul). Most of this is large-scale and mechanized, and is closely integrated
with cattle production, largely for reasons of weed control. Lowlands are typically only
planted with rice once every three years and kept under non-irrigated pasture for the
other two. From 1978 to 1988 the Government promoted conventional lowland rice irrigation
on a smaller scale, under the Provarzeas programme that is now suspended.
(ii) The southeast region, stretching approximately from the
Tropic of Capricorn to 14 degrees south is, like the extreme south, dominated by
technically advanced, commercial farmers. Although it also receives most of its rainfall
in the summer, winters are milder. Hence, winter irrigation allows the farmer to crop
twice instead of once, rotating winter plantings of wheat, peas or beans with rainfed
summer crops, which include cotton and sugar cane. There is also supplementary irrigation
of summer crops when necessary. Although there is less of the extensive flooded rice
typical of the south, the Provarzeas programme has made considerable progress in the last
ten years, also in the southeast. Here it encouraged the growth of beans and other crops
using supplementary irrigation in winter, in rotation with the main crop of summer flooded
rice.
(iii) The centre-west stretches from the fringes of the Amazon
basin in the west to the state of Goiás in the east, and from 8 degrees to 24 degrees
south. At its westerly extreme it has a relatively well-distributed rainfall of up to 2
500 mm/year and there is little need for irrigation. Further to the east, rainfall
decreases to some 1 000 m and irrigation is required during a six-month dry season.
However, most of the centre-west is cerrado (savanna) land, potentially productive if the
soil's natural acidity and low phosphates are corrected. Since cerrado soil management
techniques are newly developed, only over the last decade has much of the region been
opened for cultivation, mainly by advanced farmers from further south. Increasing numbers
of farmers are taking advantage of the region's many perennial rivers and streams to
complement their rainfed cereal, soybean, bean and cotton production with dry-season
irrigated cropping. The large properties and level land are well suited to centre-pivot
and self-propelled irrigation systems, which have expanded in the last years. Free of
winter temperature constraints, irrigation in the cerrado can greatly increase the
intensity of this vast, recently occupied area.
(iv) The northeast includes Brasil's semi-arid lands, which
have an irregularly-distributed annual rainfall averaging from 750 mm to less than 250 mm.
The region contains the country's poorest farmers and large numbers of landless
people. Many farmers cultivate for subsistence only. Unlike other regions water resources
in most of the northeast are a severe constraint to agriculture. One major river, the São
Francisco, dominates the region, but the topography generally requires that its water be
extracted by pumping. There are a few other naturally perennial rivers like the Parnaiba
(Piauí/Maranhão), and although regulation structures have been built on some seasonal
rivers by the Government, many now run dry due to uncontrolled water extraction. There are
some lowland areas suitable for flooded rice mainly in the humid coastal strip. Where
water constraints can be overcome, the warm northeastern climate favours maize, beans,
cotton and sugar cane, as well as year-round multiple fruticulture and horticultural
cropping and seed production. Large public-sector irrigation schemes have been constructed
and allocated both to entrepreneurs and small-scale settlers, with the aim of overcoming
intermittent regional food deficits while creating employment and benefiting the rural
poor. Increasing use is being made of drip and sprinkler irrigation in water-scarce areas
with fruit trees that are now receiving special attention from the federal and state
governments.
(v) The north region covers almost the whole Amazon Region,
being the largest extension of hot and humid forest in the world. It occupies almost half
of the Brazilian territory. The climate is hot and humid. Irrigation needs are few, and
development is limited to a small area of lowland rice.
Main characteristics of the agro-climatic regions of Brazil
| Average values |
South |
South-East |
Centre-West |
North-East |
North |
| Temperature (°
C) |
14 - 18 |
24 - 18 |
26 - 22 |
20 - 28 |
24 - 26 |
| Annual rainfall (mm) |
1 250 - 2 000 |
900 - 4 400 |
1 250 - 3 000 |
250 - 2 000 |
1 500 - 3 000 |
Water resources
For general purposes, Brazil can be divided into:
(i) three river basins namely the Amazons, Tocantins and São
Francisco; and
(ii) two basin complexes:
- the Plata river that has three Brazilian sub-river basins (Paraná,
Upper Paraguay and Uruguay);
- the remaining rivers flowing into the Atlantic that are divided into
several basins.
The Amazon and the Tocantins-Araguaia basins in the north account for
56 percent of Brazil's total drainage area. The Amazon River, the world's
largest river in volume of water and second longest after the Nile, is navigable by ocean
steamers as far as Iquitos in Peru. The Paraná-Paraguay river system drains the
south-western portion of the state of Minas Gerais. Brazil's two southernmost states
are drained through the Uruguay River also into the Plata River. The São Francisco River
is the largest river entirely within Brazil, flowing for over 1 609 km northward before it
turns eastward into the Atlantic. The last 277 km of the lower river is navigable for
ocean-going ships.
FIGURE 1
Map of Brazil showing the main river basins with their water resources characteristics

| Basin name |
AREA (km2) |
P (mm/y) |
E (mm/y) |
Q (m3/s) |
q (l/s/km2) |
| 1 Amazon in Brazil |
3935000 |
8735,7 |
4918,8 |
3784,4 |
30,8 |
| 2 Tocantins-Araguaia |
757000 |
1256,6 |
884,2 |
372,1 |
15,6 |
| 3 North and
Northeast |
1029000 |
1533,0 |
1239,6 |
285,4 |
8,8 |
| 4 San Francisco |
634000 |
580,7 |
490,7 |
89,9 |
4,5 |
| 5 East Atlantic |
545000 |
321,0 |
246,2 |
137,2 |
8,0 |
| 6 Paraná-Paraguai |
1245000 |
2139,9 |
1656,7 |
387,6 |
9,9 |
| 7 Uruguai |
178000 |
278,9 |
148,1 |
130,9 |
23,3 |
| 8 Southeast
Atlantic |
224000 |
312,3 |
176,7 |
135,6 |
19,2 |
| TOTAL |
8547000 |
15158,1 |
9761,0 |
5323,1 |
|
The internal surface water resources, understood as the average
water production within Brazil, is 5 323 km3/y. The inflow of the Amazon to
Brazil is 2 807 km3/y, so that the total surface water resources in the country
reach, on average, 8 172 km3/y. The outflow from Brazil into the Plata River is
518 km3/y. The data shown in Figure 1 illustrates the great hydrological
diversity of the Brazilian territory. It also shows that the lowest water availability
ratio, both per person and per area, is in the semi-arid region of East Atlantic 1 and in
the São Francisco River Basin.
The annual recharge of groundwater is estimated at 95 km3/y.
The volume of stored groundwater in Brazil less than 1 000 m deep and with good quality
for human uses is estimated at 112 000 km3, with very variable extraction
rates. These range from less than 5 m3/h in the metamorphic rocks of the
semi-arid northeast and recent deposits to 1 000 m3/h in the sedimentary rocks.
There are around 200 000 wells being exploited, with drilling of about 10 000 wells a
year. Approximately 61 percent of the Brazilian population is supplied for domestic
purposes from subsurface water.
The northeast region deserves special emphasis because of (i) its
semi-arid climate with low precipitation (average of 600 mm/y) and high potential
evaporation (2 000 mm/y) and (ii) predominance of metamorphic rocks with low capacity to
accumulate groundwater. The rivers have intermittent flow, except for the São Francisco
and Parnaíba. The limited surface water availability has resulted in over-exploitation of
the aquifers since early this century. In the last 30 years, however, there has been much
concern to survey, evaluate and use the water resources of the region better. The region
has a surface of 1.6 million km2 (20 percent), comprises nine federal units and
had a population of 43.9 million (27 percent) in 1996. The region is divided into 24 river
basins, the water resources of which vary between 820 and 850 m3/inhab./year in
Pernambuco and Fortaleza to 30 000 m3/inhab./year in Gurupi.
The Treaty of the River del Plata entered into force in 1977 and worked
for several years as a political interconnection among the countries of the southern cone
(Argentina, Brazil, Bolivia, Paraguay and Uruguay). Its main objectives are the wise use
of water resources; regional development with preservation of flora and fauna; physical,
fluvial and terrestrial integration; and promotion of greater knowledge of the basin, its
resources and potential.
The Amazon Cooperation Treaty (TCA) was signed in 1978 by Brazil,
Colombia, Ecuador, Guyana, Peru, Surinam and Venezuela and entered into force for Brazil
in 1980. The basic scope of the TCA is to promote the harmonic development of the Amazon,
in order to allow an equitable distribution of the benefits, to improve the quality of
living of its peoples and to achieve the full incorporation of their Amazon territories to
the respective domestic economies.
Other treaties include: (i) the Cooperation Agreement for the Use of
Natural Resources and Development of the Quaraí River Basin; and (ii) the Treaty for the
use of Shared Natural Resources of the Bordering Stretches of the Uruguay River and its
tributary, the Pepiri-Guaçu River, between Brazil and Argentina.
Lakes and dams
The consumption of electric energy stood at 258 000 GWh in 1996.
The installed capacity is 57 640 MW, 93 percent of which is from hydrolectric power
stations and 7 percent from thermoelectric power stations. The percentage contribution of
the hydroelectric power stations for energy generation (97 percent) is greater than the
percentage of the installed potential (93 percent) because thermoelectric power stations
are inoperative for long periods of time, only being activated mostly during dry periods,
when reservoirs become dangerously low. The Itaipu power plant, the largest hydroelectric
plant in the world (power production is 12 600 MW divided equally between Brazil and
Paraguay), is located on the Paraná River on the Paraguay-Brazil frontier, not far from
Iguaçu Falls. New hydrolectric power stations are to be built in several of already
inventoried places, making a total of 107 307 MW of installed generating power in the next
few decades. The Brazilian hydroelectric potential is around 258 686 MW, of which only 21
percent is being exploited.
Water withdrawal
Theoretically, the country has ample water resources in six of its
eight major water basins to supply all foreseeable long-term irrigation requirements. In
1996, the average consumption of irrigation water was 12 629 m3/ha per year.
Only in the northeast and in the eastern tributaries of the São Francisco basin is
irrigation development constrained by water availability. Already, 0.04 km3/of
desalinated water are used for livestock and domestic purposes in the northeast region.
Local water shortage also occurs in some small watersheds in the southeast and south where
irrigation development and water consumption for industry and municipal use have been
relatively uncontrolled. In these areas, as well as on some rivers in the northeast and
along some tributaries of the São Francisco river, water use would have to be controlled
and regulated if economic losses and degradation of quality are to be avoided.
Fig. 2 Water withdrawal by sector in Brazil 1996

Irrigation and drainage
The irrigation potential of Brazil is estimated at 29.3 million ha
(see following table). This includes only areas where irrigation can be developed and
excludes the areas of high ecological value in the northern region (Amazonas and Tocantins
basin). In the savanna areas (cerrados) of the centre-west region, the potential for
irrigation has expanded substantially in recent years, following recent advances in soil
management and irrigation techniques applicable in that region. The irrigated area in 1998
was 2.8 million ha, which represents 5.7 percent of the cultivated area.
Irrigation potential (in thousand hectares) by regions
| |
Lowlands
"Varzeas*"
(1 000 ha) |
Highlands
(1 000 ha) |
Total Area
(1 000 ha) |
North
Northeast
Southeast
South
Centre-West |
8 000
100
750
1 500
3 000 |
5 300
900
3 400
2 200
4 200 |
13 300
1 000
4 150
3 700
7 200 |
| Total |
13 350 |
16 000 |
29 350 |
* Varzeas are seasonally-flooded or
flood-prone lowlands.
Irrigation started in Brazil in
the last century, in Rio Grande do Sul and in the semi-arid region of the northeast. By
the end of the 1960s, the Group for Integrated Studies on Irrigation and Agricultural
Development (GEIDA) was created to enlarge the overall knowledge of natural resources. It
created various programmes such as the Pluri-annual Irrigation Programme (PPI) in 1969,
and the National Integration Programme (PIN) in 1970. Many opportunities were given for
private investments on irrigation and drainage: (i) the National Programme for Rational
Use of Flood Plains (PROVARZEAS); (ii) the Programme to Finance Irrigation Equipment
(PROFIR); (iii) the conception of "entrepreneurial lots" in public irrigation
projects; and (iv) the implementation of the sub-sectoral Irrigation I Project. In 1984 a
new period started characterized by the establishment of important programmes such as the
Northeast Irrigation Programme (PROINE) and the National Irrigation Programme (PRONI),
both in 1986. In that period, the Government's role was limited to the accomplishment
of large works (transmission and distribution of electrical energy and macro-drainage)
while the private entrepreneurs were in charge of the other investments. In 1995, the new
Government started preparing the National Policy on Irrigation and Drainage. Figure 3
shows the evolution of irrigation areas in Brazil. The area under irrigation was estimated
at 2.87 million ha in 1998.
FIGURE 3
Irrigation evolution in Brazil

Irrigation techniques differ within Brazil (Figure 4). In the south,
southeast and centre-west, rice paddies, as well as some vegetable and orchard crops, are
irrigated by simple flooding or using furrow irrigation. Over 790 000 ha of paddy rice are
grown with basin irrigation in Rio Grande do Sul. Water is diverted from numerous small
streams and conveyed to the farm-gates through earth canals. At least 1.5 million ha in
Brazil are estimated to be under traditional systems of this sort. They are used where
water availability is ample. This technology, together with proper land preparation and
some mechanization, yields a good return. Modern irrigation technologies, which have a
higher water-use efficiency and require less labour, are preferred by large farmers in the
cerrados, for crops such as wheat, soybean, maize, and cotton, and by the producers of
vegetables and fruits near the metropolitan areas in the northeast. These technologies,
which are increasingly used in private and public irrigation schemes, range from mobile
sprinkler lines to state-of-the-art modern centre-pivot and other self-propelled
irrigation equipment. In the northeast there is a strong increase in the use of
micro-irrigation equipment, due to the water scarcity in the area. In recent years, the
area with surface irrigation has decreased and that with sprinkler irrigation for grain
production and micro-irrigation for fruit and vegetables has increased. Total efficiency
of water use is estimated, on average, at 40-65 percent for surface, 60-85 percent for
sprinkler and 78-97 percent for micro-irrigation methods.
FIGURE 4
Irrigated area in 1996 by irrigation techniques for the main agro-ecological regions of Brazil

Irrigated agriculture can be divided into public and private schemes:
- Public schemes that represent 160 000 ha (6 percent of the total
irrigated area in 1996). Most of these public irrigation schemes are in the northeast
region, 107 115 ha in 1996. The size of the irrigation schemes varies between 42 and 22
000 ha. Most of the investments are made by Government, which then allocates plots from 4
to 8 ha to poor or landless farmers (settlers). In addition, there are some medium-size
plots (from 8 to 32 ha) usually for professionals (agrarian technicians) and large-size
plots (from 25 to 500 ha) for enterprises. Public irrigation systems depend on water
supplies that have been developed using Government (usually Federal Government) funds. The
total cost of development of public irrigation projects in the northeast is approximately
US$ 8 600/ha, US$ 9 650/ha and US$10 150/ha for surface, sprinkler and micro-irrigation,
respectively. The water charge in 1998 according to the Company for the Development of the
São Francisco Valley (CODEVASF) had two components: one to recover the investment cost of
the irrigation and drainage system and the other to cover the operation and maintenance
costs. The first depends on surface area and values range between US$ 2 and 9 per ha. The
second depends on water consumption and values vary between US$ 1.5 and 15 per 1000 m3.
CODEVASF has experienced that it is easier to cover operation and maintenance costs in the
irrigation systems with larger plot areas than in ones with smaller plot areas.
- The rest of Brazil´s irrigation (94 percent) has been developed by
private individuals or companies. Private development has received technical support from
the Government, especially under the PROVARZEAS programme and financial assistance through
targeted credit lines. It comprises many forms of irrigation ranging from small to
large-scale, and from simple to highly sophisticated irrigation. Investment costs of
private irrigation are considerably lower than in the public sector, ranging from US$ 1
600/ha for surface irrigation to US$ 2 650/ha for sprinkler irrigation and US$ 3 150/ha
for micro-irrigation. Generally, investment costs of private irrigation are higher in the
northeast than in the other regions due to the difficulty for accessing perennial sources
of water. Average costs of operation and maintenance range from US$ 35 to 95/ha. Costs can
also be broken down into off-farm investment costs (water pumps, electrical support,
conveyance, roads), that vary from US$ 4 500/ha to US$ 7 000/ha, and on-farm investment
costs that vary between US$ 650/ha for simple surface irrigation methods to US$ 2 500/ha
for micro-irrigation.
In 1997, irrigation contributed an estimated 18 percent of total crop
production in weight, and some 29 percent of total farmgate value (since irrigated crops
are relatively high-value). Average yields of rainfed and irrigated crop are given in
Figure 5.
FIGURE 5
Average crop yields for irrigated and rainfed farming

The range of crops grown under irrigation is diverse. In addition to basic
commodities such as wheat, maize, rice, beans, soybeans and cotton, high-value crops are
also grown whenever markets permit, like vegetables (some of them on a semi-industrial
scale) near the important urban markets of the industrial southeast. The same markets are
supplied off-season with fruits, onions, melons and other vegetables from the northeast.
Expansion of tomato paste and other vegetable processing factories in the arid zones of
the northeast has created market opportunities for large-scale and small-scale irrigators,
who increasingly export their fruit and off-season vegetables to Japan, Europe and the
United States. Yields of crops vary widely throughout the country.
There has been a great diversity of performance between the public and
private irrigation sectors. Public irrigation generally tended to progress slowly and fall
short of performance expectations while private irrigation, especially in recent years,
has expanded fast and often given high profits. However, direct comparisons are difficult
due to regional differences in irrigation needs and opportunities, the special social
needs of the impoverished northeast and the different institutional arrangements for
public and private development. In 1990 FAO, World Bank and the Government of Brazil
undertook in a detailed study to estimate the economic efficiency of Brazil's irrigation.
On the basis of information collected, eleven different models of irrigation farming were
defined to represent irrigation in Brazil. The results showed that public schemes were
systematically less economically efficient than private schemes, and that basic
commodities (cereals, cotton, beans, soybeans) would give a much lower return than fruits
and vegetables. Under these conditions, the public schemes of the northeast, growing
staple food, yielded a very low return. Net economic benefit generated per 1 000 m3
of water averaged around US$ 20 for low-value crops and US$ 50-400 for high-value crops,
while net economic returns per year were, on average, around US$ 250 for low-value crops
and US$ 2 000/ha for high-value crops.
Little information is available in drainage, salinity and waterlogging
in Brazil. The surface with drainage equipment is around 1.28 million ha, mostly in the
areas with irrigation equipment. Within the framework of the PROVARZEAS programme in the
1980s, around 400 000 ha were drained. Average costs of drainage development in 1996 range
between US$ 1 600 and 1 800 per ha for open drainage, and from US$ 2 300 to 2 700 perha
for subsurface drainage.
The natural saline areas in Brazil are quantified on average at 86
million ha, located especially in the driest areas with average precipitation below 1 000
mm/y. The area salinized by irrigation is estimated at 15 000 ha, mostly in the northeast.
The extension of the areas with natural waterlogging, called
"varzeas", is 13.35 million ha. Up to now, waterlogging problems caused by
irrigation practices have only been recorded in the Nupeba project for an area of 170 ha.
CODEVASF is in the process of designing and implementing a
drainage system to prevent waterlogging.
Institutional Environment
In 1965, the National Department for Water and Electrical Energy
(DNAEE) under the Ministry of Mines and Energy was entrusted with the management and
control of the country's water resources. In 1979, the Ministry of the Interior (MINTER)
assumed water resources planning and control functions and delivered irrigation permits.
In 1986, the federal irrigation functions of MINTER were consolidated under the direction
of a special Minister of Irrigation Affairs. Two programmes were created: the Northeast
Irrigation Programme (PROINE) and the National Irrigation Programme (PRONI). Their mandate
was essentially the planning, coordination, promotion and monitoring of irrigation
activities in collaboration with the newly established state-level Irrigation Coordinating
Committees (ECEs). In December 1988, PROINE and PRONI were merged into a single irrigation
programme (new PRONI).
From 1995 to 1998, the Ministry of Environment, Water Resources and
Amazon Affairs (MMA) was responsible for:
- Water resources through the Water Resources Secretariat (SRH). A
National Programme for the Development of Water Resources (PROAGUA) was launched in
December 1997. In addition, the National Council of Water Resources (CNRH) was created in
January 1997.
- Irrigation affairs. Field implementation of federally-funded
irrigation infrastructure is carried out by the Company for the Development of São
Francisco Valley (CODEVASF) and the National Department for Anti-drought Works (DNOCS).
CODEVASF's original mandate was to work in the São Francisco Valley, yet today it
also operates outside its geographical boundaries. DNOCS is mandated to operate in the
northeastern drought polygon. The Public Irrigation Schemes are designed and constructed
by CODEVASF and DNOCS.
The National Policy on Irrigation and Drainage (Projeto Novo Modelo de
Irrigaçao) was launched in December 1998. In addition to MMA, the Minister of Agriculture
and Supply (MAA) and the Minister of Planning and Budget participated in the programme.
Since January 1999, a new Ministry of Environment (MMA) has been created. It is still in
charge of the management and control of the country's water resources. The irrigation
affairs, though, including DNOCS and CODEVASF, have been transferred to a "Special
Secretariat for Regional Policies", which falls directly under the Government
Council. Various responsibilities in support of irrigation projects have been transferred
also to the MAA.
At national level, agricultural research is carried out by the
Brazilian Agricultural Research Company (EMBRAPA). EMBRAPA has a number of research and
experimental stations throughout Brazil, many of which are involved in irrigation. Several
universities also carry out irrigation research. The National System for Technical
Assistance and Rural Extension (SIBRATER) and the Brazilian Technical Assistance and Rural
Extension Agency (EMBRATER), which was responsible for formulating national agricultural
extension policies and for coordinating SIBRATER, were both dismantled in April 1990.
Field level extension work continues to be carried out by state (EMATERs) or territorial
extension agencies (ATERs).
The Water Act, established in 1934, is the background for Brazilian
legislation on water. Considered by legal experts to be advanced, especially considering
the period in which it was enacted, it now needs updating to be adapted to the Federal
Constitution of 1988. This Act ensures the free use of any water current or spring for
basic life necessities and permits everyone to use any public waters, observing
administrative regulations. It further highlights that the work towards cleaning of waters
be carried out at the expense of the transgressors (pollutor-payer).
The 1988 Constitution defines federally-controlled public waters as
bodies of water or rivers which flow through, or border on, several states or a foreign
country, and as state-controlled public waters those bodies of water or rivers which rise
and end within the territory of a single state. This definition of state-controlled waters
complicates the effective management of some of the country's important rivers since the
main stem of a federally-controlled river cannot be effectively managed without
controlling water resource development on the state-controlled tributaries of the river.
An Irrigation Law was promulgated in 1979. It sets government policies
for irrigation development dealing inter alia with: (i) utilization of land and
water; (ii) research and planning; (iii) implementation of public projects; (iv) water
tariffs for public projects; (v) preservation of water quality; (vi) expropriation of land
for irrigation construction; and (vii) promotion of private projects. The Irrigation Law
and its regulations provide for the cost recovery of investment and operation and
maintenance (O&M) costs of Government-supported irrigation projects through water
charges on beneficiaries.
A Federal Law of 1997 establishes the National Water Resources Policy,
and creates the National Water Resources Management System. It states that water is a
public good and a limited natural resource with an economic value; in situations of
scarcity the priority use for water is for human and animal consumption; water resources
management should always assure the multiple use of waters; the river basin is the
territorial unit for water management; and management of water resources should be
decentralized and participatory. The National Water Resources Council (CNRH), to be
created shortly, will be the highest normative and body with the mandate to promote the
co-ordination of water resources planning, monitor the execution of the National Water
Resources Policy; establish criteria for granting of water usage rights and pricing
mechanisms. It is the strict competence of the Federal Government to legislate on water.
The States should approve and set up complementary legislation to assure that the water
resources management is adequate for the local features and to enforce the national
guidelines.
Trends in Water Resources Management
At present there is a tendency for developing basins and State
water master plans. This is done in order to secure the use of water in the various
sectors and reduce future risks in wateruse. Up to now, fourteen states have advanced
their plans for water resources management and river basin management: São Paulo, Minas
Gerais, Espirito Santo, Goiás, Mato Grosso do Sul, Mato Grosso, Distrito Federal, Ceará,
Rio Grande do Norte, Bahia, Alagoas, Sergipe, Rio Grande do Sul and Santa Catarina.
Furthermore, a large number of committees, consortium and associations at water basin
level have been created. Various Master Plans at water basin level have been elaborated
and others are in the process of preparation.
The main trend with the "Novo Projeto de Irrigação" is
towards increased private participation and privatization of public schemes. SRH of MMA
initiated in 1999 a complete study of irrigation, which intends to map the actual sites of
the irrigation schemes and select potential areas for irrigation projects without risk of water conflict.
Main sources of Information
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