Water for a food-secure world Water-related adaptation to climate change Alemseged Tamiru Haile (Ph.D.) 28 January 2014.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Linking A snapshot of challenges & opportunities for food security & sovereignty in West Africa Meredith Kushnir, REAP-Canada, Presentation for Dig In!
Advertisements

Water and Climate Change in Africa Raffaello Cervigni The World Bank.
The economics of climate change: the messages to Africa Presentation for the CDM DNA Forum Addis Ababa, 6 th October 2007 Hannah Muthoni Ryder.
Programme priorities for Near East and North Africa Mona Bishay Director of Near East and North Africa Division, PMD April th Replenishment.
Green Water Credits Use of quantitative tools to evaluate potential Green Water Credits options Peter Droogers Wilco Terink Johannes Hunink Sjef Kauffman.
David Purkey, SEI Rob Lempert, RAND
Irrigated Agriculture Sector in South Asia Challenges and Potential Soft Solutions Mani Manivasakan Practice Leader Rural Water.
LOGO Bangkok, May 2009 Water Resources Management in Ba River Basin under Future Development and Climate Scenarios Presented by: Nguyen Thi Thu Ha Examination.
Dr. Abid Qaiyum Suleri Sustainable Agriculture Policy Climate Change Hunger Sustainable Development Policy Institute Islamabad, Pakistan.
Food Security Prepared By :Rana Hassan Supervised By :Dr. Raed Alkowni
Water and food security: The art of coping with uncertainty Side event: Global water crisis, food and agriculture in an era of climate change Jean-Marc.
Evaluating Potential Impacts of Climate Change on Surface Water Resource Availability of Upper Awash Sub-basin, Ethiopia rift valley basin. By Mekonnen.
Fluctuation in Rainfall Variance in rainfall in Singapore.
Increasing productivity and resilience Messages and project examples.
Solutions to agricultural water management Brussels 13 April 2011 Charlotte de Fraiture.
Understanding Drought
Socio- economic implications of climate change for tea producing countries.
Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada Canadian Agriculture and Climate Change: Challenges and Opportunities.
A business case to reduce rural poverty through targeted investments in water in sub-Saharan Africa WWF5 Session How can food market measures boost.
No Agriculture without Water Water for secure and viable photo Arthus-Bertrand.
The challenge of sustainable
Capacity Building in Analytical Tools for Estimating and Comparing Costs and Benefits of Adaptation Projects in the Berg River Basin, South Africa AIACC.
Irrigated agricultural ecosystems in Africa Timothy O. Williams Director, Africa International Water Management Institute (IWMI) WLE/IWMI Workshop on Unlocking.
Learning objective: To be able to explain the causes and characteristics of droughts Regional distribution of disasters by type [ ] Describe.
Bangladesh: Basic Facts Presented by: Syed Amdadul Huq Research Director (a.i.), FPMU 22/02/10 Presentation to Cambodian Food Security Team.
Introduction to the Session 6 - Theme 4 – on “Water Resources Management and Governance”
Subtitle, Date, Presenter Optimizing intensified Runoff from Roads for Supplemental Irrigation, Tigray Region,Ethiopia March,13/ 2014 By:Meseret Dawit.
IRRIGATION DEVELOPMENT IN KENYA
Integrating Adaptation into Development Policy Breakout Session C.
Preliminary Results on Smallholder Irrigation Technologies International Water Management Institute (IWMI)
Dr. R.P.Pandey Scientist F. NIH- Nodal Agency Misconception: A DSS takes decisions ---(No)
DISASTER RISK REDUCTION vs. CLIMATE CHANGE ADAPTATION: Sharing of Good Practice Options Satendra Executive Director NIDM.
Environmentally Sound Design & Management. EA Training Course Tellus Institute 2 Environmentally Sound Design Definition & Motivation  Environmentally.
Understanding „the nexus“ in the MENA region Holger Hoff Stockholm Environment Institute Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research Beirut, 22 January.
Exploring the use of water pricing as a policy tool to improve water resource use efficiency in the agricultural sector FAO, OECD and IWMI Session: “Drops.
The objective of this presentation is to gain an understanding of sustainable agriculture and discuss the roadmap to move in this direction.  Agriculture.
SRP: IMPROVED MANAGEMENT OF MAJOR AGRICULTURAL RIVER BASINS - OVERVIEW Vladimir Smakhtin SRP River Basin Workshop Addis, May 28, 2012.
Biofuels, Food Security and Environmental Sustainability: Global Challenges and Opportunities Daniel G. De La Torre Ugarte The Politics of Food Conference.
GECAFS Regional research Regional GECAFS projects GEC and the Indo-Gangetic Plain food system GECAFS Scenario science developing “comprehensive” natural/social.
Overview of Climate-Smart Agriculture for livestock production and livelihood in West Africa.
Presented by Binaya Pasakhala Assessing Vulnerability of People’s Livelihood in Far-western Nepal: Implications on Adaptation to Climate Change.
International Conference on Food Security in Drylands Doha November Water-Related Risks and Opportunities for Foreign Direct Investments in Africa.
Water for a food-secure world Ensuring success of irrigation in SSA Tim Williams Director, Africa IWMI.
Regional Learning Session on Sustainable and Inclusive Marketing Arrangements Towards Increasing Farmers’ Market Power 9-11 May 2013 Manila Vedini Harishchandra.
1 Summary of Vulnerability Assessment & Farming System Change under the Second National Communication to the UNFCCC Ministry of Environment and Tourism.
Country CBA Project :Sri Lanka A study to economically evaluate possible adaptation measures for climate vulnerabilities in paddy and Other Field Crops.
Vulnerability and Adaptation of Water Resources to Climate Change in Egypt Dr. Dia Eldin Elquosy
AGRON / MTEOR 404 Global Change Changes to Water Resources Raymond Arritt Department of Agronomy.
Principal Investigator: Dr. Amir Muhammed, Director Asianics Agro. Dev. International, Islamabad, Pakistan Countries Involved: Pakistan, India, Nepal,
Understanding hydrologic changes: application of the VIC model Vimal Mishra Assistant Professor Indian Institute of Technology (IIT), Gandhinagar
Climate Change Risks, Implications and Recommendations for Adaptation: Climate Change Risks, Implications and Recommendations for Adaptation: The case.
Living with water shortages To know why water availability and quality is declining To be able to explain the difference between water scarcity and water.
Assessment of Vulnerability on the Aral See Basin NATALYA AGALTSEVA Research Hydrometeorological institute (NIGMI) Uzhydromet Uzbekistan.
Is There a Dust Bowl in Our Future? Projections for the Eastern Rockies and Central Great Plains.” Dennis Ojima Water, Climate and Uncertainty Conference.
BASIN SCALE WATER INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTMENT EVALUATION CONSIDERING CLIMATE RISK Yasir Kaheil Upmanu Lall C OLUMBIA W ATER C ENTER : Global Water Sustainability.
Agricultural (rain and irrigation) water management across landscape for sustainable intensification and smallholders resilience building.
Objective 1: To increase resilience of smallholder production systems Output -Integrated crop-livestock systems developed to improve productivity, profitability.
Phase 2 Research Questions Theme 1: Nutrition, food safety and value addition 1)Which combinations of technology packages can reduce household vulnerability.
DIAS INFORMATION DAY GLOBAL WATER RESOURCES AND ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE Date: 09/07/2004 Research ideas by The Danish Institute of Agricultural Sciences (DIAS)
Improving livestock water productivity under changing climate Theib Oweis, ICARDA, Aleppo, Syria & Don Peden, ILRI, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia Presentation.
Weather index insurance, climate variability and change and adoption of improved production technology among smallholder farmers in Ghana Francis Hypolite.
Smallholder Farmers Perspective on Agriculture Insurance in Malawi by Dyborn Chibonga, NASFAM CEO Presentation at Africa-Asia Conclave on Loss and Damage.
N3 Partner Technical Meeting, March 28-29
Challenges in a Changing World
RESULTS FROM THE INNOVATION LAB FOR SMALL SCALE IRRIGATION
Drought Management and Water Scarcity Adaptation
Climate Change and Water Scarcity
CLIMATE CHANGE IMPACTS ON THE WATER RESOURCES OF GHANA
Climate-Smart Agriculture in the Near East North Africa Region
Challenges in a Changing World
Presentation transcript:

Water for a food-secure world Water-related adaptation to climate change Alemseged Tamiru Haile (Ph.D.) 28 January 2014

Water for a food-secure world Water scarcity Physical scarcity: Not enough water. Economic Scarcity: Not infrastructure to make water available to people Both scarcities should be managed

Water for a food-secure world Distribution of the percentage of area under irrigation Ample room for development

Water for a food-secure world Climate change: change in the statistical properties of the climate system Economy, Population, Technology Increased GHGE Anthropogenic Global warming Regional Changes Precipitation, Temperature, sea level Impact Water, Agriculture, Energy, etc. Measures Mitigation, Coping, Adaptation Loss and damage Average condition, Variability, Extremes Demand, Supply, Reservoir evaporation, Infrastructure damage Fossil fuel, GW pumping, Land use change, Livestock Adapt to (i) less soil moisture and higher evaporation, (ii) Increased floods

Water for a food-secure world Climate change adds new challenges

Water for a food-secure world Source: Maartin de Wit and Jacek Stankiewicz African Scenarios – uncertainty is the keyword! Small changes in temperature will see average river flows and water availability increase by 10-40% in some regions, while in others there will be a decrease of 10-30% Changes in surface water supply across Africa with Predicted Climate Change Increases and decreases: Potential ET Actual ET Runoff 10 models show likely decrease of runoff 7 shows like increase of runoff Example: Blue Nile GCM Downscaling Precipitation

Water for a food-secure world Climate change: Ethiopia Studies show impact of CC on Sectors By 2050 climate change could cause [Robinson et al., 2013]: – GDP to be 8–10 percent smaller than under a no-climate change baseline; – a two-fold increase in variability of growth in agriculture; – it would affect more severely the poor and certain parts of the country. ADAPTATION IS THE PRIORITY

Water for a food-secure world Barriers to adaptation (Based on Deressa et al., 2009 and Haile et al., 2014) Farmers perception is there is long-term temperature and precipitation change The least practiced adaptation strategy by HHs in the Nile basin is - Irrigation Barriers to adaptation – Not knowing which kind of measures to take – Insufficient financial means – Shortage of labor

Water for a food-secure world Water-related adaptation to climate change Despite its high productivity, irrigation is under growing pressure to reduce its environmental impact, including soil salinization and nitrate contamination of aquifers

Water for a food-secure world Water-related adaptation to climate change Inadequate storage leaves farmers vulnerable to CC Store water for use in times of shortage Continuum of storage: Reservoirs, Ponds and tanks, aquifer, soil moisture The best option is to focus on – Combining a variety of storage types – Consider CC in planning, design and operatio n – Types of storage – tailored to specific conditions

Water for a food-secure world Household Irrigation Technology (HIT) to transform Ethiopian agriculture sector Agricultural intensification -Save and Grow - requires – Target households – Knowledge-based precision irrigation – Use of improved, drought tolerant varieties and management practices that save water – Reliable and flexible water application Deficit irrigation Estimates over the next 5 years indicate HIT could enable: – Over 500,000 ha could be irrigated - Doubling existing irrigation – >650,000 farming households to become agricultural entrepreneurs, – increasing family income and food security for almost 5 million Ethiopians – Adding $600 million USD and 30,000 jobs to the national economy

Water for a food-secure world 7 major bottlenecks in the Household Irrigation sector of Ethiopia (Source: ATA) 1.Lack of readily available information on groundwater resource potential – to recommend technically feasible water lifting and saving technologies 2.Lack of data on high value crops for specific agroecology of the woredas 3.Absence of well-trained manufacturers to produce quality manual and mechanized HITs for smallholders, and lack of clear standards for HITs 4.Lack of reliable and interdependent HITs and other irrigation agriculture input supply chain 5.Absence of credit access to smallholder farmers to purchase HITs and other agriculture inputs during irrigation season 6.Smallholders are not getting the right training and advisory support on irrigated agriculture and the agriculture research system offers limited attention to high value crops 7.Frequent HIT failures and absence of locally available maintenance services or spare parts

Water for a food-secure world Adaptive management of groundwater (AMGRAF) Aim: to enable sustainable development of accessible (shallow) groundwater for small-scale irrigation Assessment of groundwater resource and use Development of tools for adaptive groundwater management Research into scenarios of water management Socio-economic: Livelihood impact, governance, institutions Working definition of accessibility – The depth to GW should be less than 30m

Water for a food-secure world Adaptive management of groundwater (AMGRAF) Key findings include (eg): There is some experience of GW use GW resource is not evenly distributed among households How to break Hard rocks to access water below metres? Overexploitation??? Limitations to expanding use of irrigation include: water lifting mechanisms; wells dry out, scarcity of land; shortage of seedlings If more irrigation available, would grow vegetable crops (onions, cabbage, pepper, garlic etc)

Water for a food-secure world Spate irrigation Floods are not always a hazard. They may also sustain aquatic life and riverine biodiversity, recharge aquifers, enrich soils and in some of the worlds poorest areas they are the main source of irrigation. Global Water Partnership (2000) Toward water security: a framework for action Expansion of Spate Irrigation due to – Physical reasons Lowlands: extensive flat, fertile surrounded by hills with high rainfall The expansion of agriculture to the mountains – land degradation, reduced base flow, increased drought – Socio-economic reasons Increased population in the lowland areas - increased demand provides the livelihoods for economically marginal people

Water for a food-secure world Spate irrigation Climatic factor for use of SI: – Reduced rainfall – Increased dry spells – Increased temperature Challenges: – Unpredictable floods – Frequent damage of structures Increased floods – Encourage SI Farmers observations over the last decade Observation% of farmers Rainfall decreased63 LGP reduced85 Temperature increased73 Freq. of dry spells increased 64 Volume, freq. and duration of spate flow decreased 90 How to properly to divert and manage the flood water for crop production?

Water for a food-secure world IMPACT2C Several reservoirs planned in Blue Nile – Target ensuring food security at households-E.g. Upper Beles:~20000 HHs What is the link between these reservoirs? – Upstream-downstream trade-offs and opportunities – Hydropower, irrigation, environment – Water allocation CC impact on – Demand and supply Role of reservoirs - adaptation – Variability vs supply – Flood control – Water allocation

Water for a food-secure world IMPACT2C Quantifying projected impacts under 2°C warming Global climate modeling (GCM), dynamic regional downscaling (RCM), and bias correction Set of models and approaches can be used to assess impact SWAT, HBV WEAP, CROPWAT, Mendlik and Gobiet (2013)

Water for a food-secure world Conclusion Better communicate CC uncertainty Adapt to less soil moisture and increased floods Invest in R&D to enhance adaptation Accessibility is more important than potential – infrastructure – RWH (in-situ soil moisture maximization, ponds) – Shallow GW wells Provide more and diverse physical storage infrastructure Consider CC in planning, design & operation of storage schemes Save and Grow – Irrigation technologies (treadle pumps, hand pumps, drip irrigation) and water saving

Water for a food-secure world THANK YOU!!!