Managing
water is key to adapting African agriculture to climate change
A unanimous
decision on how to take action on climate change is incredibly rare. Yet, African
nationshave overwhelmingly included climate resilient agriculture in
their indicative pledges to the United Nations. And agriculture is seen as a
major focus through a common
position of the African Union
on climate adaptation.
Agriculture employs
more than 60% of Africa’s working population. But low productivity and high levels of
food insecurity persist. So the inclusion of agriculture in strategies should
come as no surprise. The question is: how are African nations going to move
from pledges to progress?
The Moroccan
government, the host of this year’s COP22 climate talks, is seeking the answer with the launch of the ambitious Adaptation of African
Agriculture initiative. The initiative is high on the agenda. The
aim is to mobilise $30 billion to make agriculture more resilient to the changing climate.
Improved water management
Increasing the amount
of water for agriculture through water storage at all levels from field to
reservoir will be a part of the solution. But existing water sources also can
be managed better. In fact, certain regions in Africa have untapped water. Take
west Africa, for example, where Ghana withdraws less than 2% of the available surface
and groundwater resources. Yet crops are still perishing when
drought hits, and people are still going hungry.
The challenge across the region is to provide an environment that enables
countries to draw on the water where needed and use it in the most effective
and sustainable way possible. Where water supplies are already under pressure,
improving the productivity of water use in agriculture would make more water
available for other uses.
The urban, energy and
industrial sectors can also encourage productivity gains and more sustainable
and climate resilient practices through benefit sharing mechanisms like the Tana
Water Fund.
Investment in water storage
Farmers will
increasingly need to rely on water storage as part of the adaptation agenda. It
is important to increase investment in a range of water storage techniques.
Such techniques include banking groundwater during the wet season, harvesting
rainwater and storing water in the ground by conserving soil moisture. In
countries like India and Thailand for example, scientists are making progress
on capturing floodwater
underground, which can then be used for irrigation. Such measures
can be considered alongside more conventional surface storage systems for
buffering variability, like small farm ponds and large reservoirs.
Improved soil
management practices have potential to both improve the utilisation of water
and increase production. They are increasingly seen as a natural way to store
carbon, turning soils into a carbon sink.
This can open up new funding prospects that will have multiple benefits.
Adopting water management practices to a local context is crucial. This
will improve resilience by bridging the dry spells that are increasingly
occurring during the rainy season and increasing or opening up the opportunity
for additional dry-season agricultural production. It’s also necessary to learn
lessons from past projects where outcomes have not been effective.
More efficient use of water
Increasing yield per
unit of water used will be critical for agricultural adaptation. New efficient
irrigation technologies, like drip and sprinkler irrigation, are already
showing much promise. For example, experience from Asia has shown that – when
used in conjunction with high-yielding crop varieties and good soil management
practices – yields and water savings have increased by 40% in the Coimbatore District of Tamil Nadu, India.
A training programme helped farmers to improve their knowledge of how to
use and maintain subsidised drip irrigation systems. It also showed them
fertigation techniques, in which fertiliser is applied to crops through the
irrigation system. This is a precise and efficient method that saves both time
and money.
One banana farmer was able to reduce the daily duration of irrigation from
three hours to as little as an hour and 45 minutes. At the same time, his
yields nearly doubled. The initiative is now being scaled up across the
neighbouring region and has potential in many parts of Africa.
Getting advice to farmers
Farmers, as well as
decision-makers and insurance firms, need improved information and early
warning systems to better respond to climate variability. In Egypt, Sudan and
Ethiopia, a
new SMS system is being piloted,
which is delivering field-specific information and advice in local languages.
Farmers can track crop growth and water efficiency and receive daily
irrigation advice. In addition, online data portals enable local advisers to
monitor the status of all individual registered fields. Based on observed
differences between farms, or even within a single field, advisers can spot
problems and help the farmer in need.
To implement these key
strategies, significant funding will be required. Currently, Africa attracts
only 5%of
the world’s climate-related funding, even though 65% of the African population is directly exposed to the effects of climate
change.
By harnessing climate
funding for improved agricultural water management, African nations will reap
multiple rewards. These rewards will be in the form of improved resilience to
extreme weather events, and a food-secure future. Both of these are central to
achieving the Sustainable
Development Goalsrelated to reducing hunger, improving health and
livelihoods, as well as combating climate change.
The Morocco climate talks are a golden opportunity for making strides on
the adaptation of African agriculture. African countries have made their
commitment to this issue clear. They now need to be empowered with the tools
and strategies for taking action.
Improved water management approaches may be just one piece of the puzzle,
but will provide benefits for generations to come.
Jeremy Bird,
Director General, International Water Management Institute, International
Water Management Institute
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