Top Banner
1 Rainwater Management for Increased Agricultural production of African Studies – Porto- Portugal 2 – 3 Octobe CONFERENCE ON WATER IN AFRICA SESSION ON WATER AND AGRICULTURE Nico van Leeuwen
38

Nico Van Leeuwen Ppt

May 19, 2015

Download

Education

Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Nico Van Leeuwen Ppt

1

Rainwater Management

for

Increased Agricultural production

Centre of African Studies – Porto- Portugal 2 – 3 October 2008

CONFERENCE ON WATER IN AFRICA

SESSION ON WATER AND AGRICULTURE

Nico van Leeuwen

Page 2: Nico Van Leeuwen Ppt

2

Outline

• Food for all ?

• Key role of water

• Smallholder adapted technologies

• Where does the rainwater go ?

• Options for management of rainwater

• Conclusions

Page 3: Nico Van Leeuwen Ppt

3

< 2.52.5–45–19

20–34≥35

No data

% undernourished

UNDERNOURISHMENT

Page 4: Nico Van Leeuwen Ppt

4

UNDERNOURISHMENT IN THE WORLD

• 776 million people in developing countriesremain undernourished

• World Food Summit goal (1996) to reduce undernourishment to 410 million but present expectations are 610 million

• Seven out of ten of the world's poor live in rural areas and depend on agriculture

• Arid zones cover 45% of the world area

Page 5: Nico Van Leeuwen Ppt

5

< 2.52.5–45–19

20–34≥35

No data

% undernourished

UNDERNOURISHMENT SUB- SAHARA AFRICA

Page 6: Nico Van Leeuwen Ppt

6

UNDERNOURISHMENT IN SUB-SAHARAN

AFRICA

• SSA undernourishment rose from 200 m people in 1995 to 450 m today.

• SSA population 62% in rural areas

• SSA rural poverty accounts for 90% of total poverty

• SSA 80% of the poor depend on agriculture

• 38 % of SSA is arid land

Page 7: Nico Van Leeuwen Ppt

7

< 2.52.5–45–19

20–34≥35

No data

% undernourished

Undernourishment and water scarcity Sub- Sahara Africa

Page 8: Nico Van Leeuwen Ppt

8

Dry land areas and rain fed agriculture

Definition and distribution of dry land areas

Classifica-tion

Length of growing period for annual

crops in days*

% of World

Land area

% of land area Sub-Saharan

Africa Hyper arid 0 19 24 arid 1 – 59 7 6 semi-arid 60 – 119 20 13 dry-sub humid

120 - 179 18 19

Arid land: 45% of world area, 38% of Sub-Saharan Africa

Page 9: Nico Van Leeuwen Ppt

9

Strong relationship between water availability and cereal production

Page 10: Nico Van Leeuwen Ppt

10

In order to reach the World Food Summit and Millennium goals

• to reduce the number of undernourished

• and feed the world population expected toincrease by 30% over the next 30 years

world food production should

be increased by 50 % in 2030

Page 11: Nico Van Leeuwen Ppt

11

Some realities:

•The green revolution is slowing down

•Serious environmental problems are appearing

•Investment in agriculture and irrigation has been reduced

•Groundwater resources are dangerously low in many countries

Page 12: Nico Van Leeuwen Ppt

Yield increase 66 %

Arable land

expansion 22 %Cropping

intensity 12 %

How to grow 50 % more food in 2030

Page 13: Nico Van Leeuwen Ppt

13

Yield Increase: •Adequate water supply to crops through Irrigation, water harvesting/runoff farming.•Improved seed•Fertiliser•Agricultural practices

Arable land expansion•Irrigate dry areas•Expand use of wetlands•Water harvesting on arid lands

Cropping intensity •Expand and improve irrigation•Reclamation and intensive use of wetlands

Page 14: Nico Van Leeuwen Ppt

14

Large irrigation projects for small number of farmers ?orSmall-scale water development for a large numberof farmers?

In developing countries

• 80% of the farmers are smallholder farmers

• practicing mainly subsistence farming

• located largely in arid and semi-arid zones or zones with erratic rainfall

Page 15: Nico Van Leeuwen Ppt

15

Improvement of water supply to crops

• accessible and affordable • to poor,• smallholder• subsistence farmers

Most appropriate technologies for smallholder farmers:

• Very-small-scale irrigation (with groundwater, surface water or collected/stored rainwater

• Water management in wetlands and valley bottoms

• Management of water from rainfall.

Page 16: Nico Van Leeuwen Ppt

16(Rockström, Fox, Persson et Falkenmark(SIWI)

RAINWATER MOVEMENTS

Page 17: Nico Van Leeuwen Ppt

17

Rainwater distribution in arid areas

(Rockström, Fox, Persson et Falkenmark(SIWI)

Page 18: Nico Van Leeuwen Ppt

18

Improved use of rainwater

• Prevent run-off

• Reduce evaporation from soil surface

• Keep water in the root zone en prevent deep percolation

Options:

• Conservation agriculture

• Rainwater harvesting – run-off farming

“Rainwater that falls on my land remains on my land”

Page 19: Nico Van Leeuwen Ppt

19

CONSERVATION AGRICULTURE

• No tillage

• Maintain coverage on soil surface

• Stimulate biological functioning of the soil

• Reduces evaporation and run-off

Conservation agriculture only works when rainfall is sufficient

Page 20: Nico Van Leeuwen Ppt

20Small-scale conservation agriculture

Page 21: Nico Van Leeuwen Ppt

21

Permanent soil coverage

Page 22: Nico Van Leeuwen Ppt

22

Mechanized conservation agriculture

Page 23: Nico Van Leeuwen Ppt

23

Run-on area= storage in the soil profile or in a reservoir

Runoff area

= catchment

The collection of runoff for its productive use

• Water applied to the crop and stored in the soil

profile: runoff farming

• Water stored in a reservoir for future use : irrigation,

Domestic use, livestock, aquaculture, etc

Rainwater Harvesting

Page 24: Nico Van Leeuwen Ppt

24

Potential areas for runoff farming

Zone P/ETP Annualrainfall

Suitability Length GrowingPeriod

Hyperarid

< 0.05 < 100 mm Too dry for runoff farming

0 day

Arid 0.05 – 0.2 100 < x <200 mm

Suitable for runoff farming

1 – 59days

Semi-arid

0.21 – 0.5 200 < x < 400 mm

Suitable for runoff farming

60 – 119days

Dry sub-humid

0.5 – 0.65 400 < x < 800 mm

Suitable for runoff storage

120 – 179days

Humid > 0.65 > 800 mm Too wet for runoff farming

> 179 days

Source: GAEZ (FAO – IIASA, 2003)

Page 25: Nico Van Leeuwen Ppt

25

Microcatchment Macrocatchment

Floodwater harvesting

Types of run-off farming water harvesting

Page 26: Nico Van Leeuwen Ppt

26

Small-scale rainwater harvesting (zai)

Page 27: Nico Van Leeuwen Ppt

27

Tree planting for reforestation or land rehabilitation

Page 28: Nico Van Leeuwen Ppt

28Inter-row water harvesting in orchard in arid area

Page 29: Nico Van Leeuwen Ppt

29

ADVANTAGE :

• coverage of 10-15 ha / day

width 0.40 m

length 4 -5 m

depth 0.40 m

DIMENSIONS :

DISADVANTAGE :

• high investment costs

Microcatchments made by the “Dolphin-plough”

Page 30: Nico Van Leeuwen Ppt

30

Page 31: Nico Van Leeuwen Ppt

31Mechanized runoff farming

Page 32: Nico Van Leeuwen Ppt

32

Rainwater harvesting or conservation •Very small scale •Large scale

Keita project in Niger FAO/Italy and WFP 1984 – 199913 000 km² - 300,000 people living in 400 villages

• 50 artificial lakes• 42 dams• 65 village wells• 10,000 ha water conservation• 16 million trees• Infrastructure: schools, maternity centres, veterinary facilities, storehouses, micro-credit, literacy courses, etc.

Page 33: Nico Van Leeuwen Ppt

33

Keita project Niger

Page 34: Nico Van Leeuwen Ppt

34

Keita project Niger

Page 35: Nico Van Leeuwen Ppt

35

1

3

1

3

2

Example:

Keita (Niger) 2

Page 36: Nico Van Leeuwen Ppt

36

Characteristics of run-off farming techniques

• Oriented towards increased agricultural production

• Reduces risks of crop failure and encourages other investments (seed, fertilizer, etc)

• Relatively Low-Cost and high return of investment

• Immediate benefits to farmers

• Reduces downstream flooding and consequent damages

more……

Page 37: Nico Van Leeuwen Ppt

37

• Contributes to increased recharge of groundwater

• Protects and rehabilitate the environment

• Combat desertification

• Alleviates the negative impact of climate change on water resources

Characteristics of run-off farming techniques

Page 38: Nico Van Leeuwen Ppt

38

Rainwater management:

a new green revolution ?

Thanks for your attention

Merci pour votre attention

Obrigado