Published January 2, 2017
0 views Journal article Open Access Open Access

Water Footprints and 'Pozas': Conversations about Practices and Knowledges of Water Efficiency

  • 1. Department of Anthropology, University of Amsterdam, P.O. Box 15509, 1001 NA Amsterdam, The Netherlands
  • 2. University of Amsterdam
  • 3. Water Resources Management Group, University of Wageningen, P.O. Box 47, 6700 AA Wageningen, The Netherlands
  • 4. Integrated Water Systems and Water Governance Department, UNESCO-IHE, P.O. Box 3015, 2601 DA Delft, The Netherlands

Description

In this article we present two logics of water efficiency: that of the Water Footprint and that of mango smallholder farmers on the desert coast of Peru (in Motupe). We do so in order to explore how both can learn from each other and to discuss what happens when the two logics meet. Rather than treating the Water Footprint as scientific, in the sense that it is separate from traditions or politics, and Motupe poza irrigation as cultural and, therefore, thick with local beliefs and superstitions, we describe both as consisting of intricate entanglements of knowledge and culture. This produces a more or less level playing field for the two water logics to meet and for proponents of each to enter into a conversation with one another; allowing furthermore for the identification of what Water Footprint inventors and promotors can learn from poza irrigators, and vice versa. The article concludes that important water wisdom may get lost when the Water Footprint logic becomes dominant, as is currently about to happen in Peru.
Enabled by The Lens

Open Access

Licence Attribution (CC BY)
Publisher Website Access full text