Identifying energy solutions to support development of irrigated agriculture in Ethiopia

Sub-Saharan African countries have long been beset with energy poverty. While there are already many studies on how to improve access to modern energy services in the region, those energy planning analyses are dominated by residential energy demand, and not much attention has yet been paid to the pr...

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Autores principales: Xie, Hua, Mekonnen, Dawit Kelemework
Formato: Artículo preliminar
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Applied Research Programme on Energy and Economic Growth 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/127219
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author Xie, Hua
Mekonnen, Dawit Kelemework
author_browse Mekonnen, Dawit Kelemework
Xie, Hua
author_facet Xie, Hua
Mekonnen, Dawit Kelemework
author_sort Xie, Hua
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Sub-Saharan African countries have long been beset with energy poverty. While there are already many studies on how to improve access to modern energy services in the region, those energy planning analyses are dominated by residential energy demand, and not much attention has yet been paid to the productive use of energy in agriculture. This paper aims at filling this knowledge gap by presenting a country-level planning analysis in Ethiopia to inform investment decisions and policy discussions about the promotion of energy use in agriculture to support the development of irrigated agriculture in the country. Irrigation is considered as a promising option to boost agricultural production and enhance agricultural resilience in Ethiopia. However, the strong water-energy nexus in irrigated agriculture implies that irrigation development in Ethiopia is hampered by energy poverty. The challenging aspect of the planning analysis for productive use of energy in irrigated agriculture is that, in addition to access to energy, irrigation adoption is constrained by many other factors such as availability of water resources, land suitability, and market potential of irrigated crops. In this study, we put the analysis into an integrated irrigation-energy planning framework and used the integrated modelling approach to identify groundwater irrigation development potentials in Ethiopia under three energy solutions: grid-connected electricity, off-grid solar PV, and diesel energy The analysis shows that by 2030, there is a potential to add about 1.05 million hectares of groundwater irrigated area. Both on-grid and off-grid energy solutions will play an important role in the effort to develop groundwater-based irrigated agriculture in Ethiopia. Moreover, the application potential of the two off grid energy solutions(solar PV and diesel) critically depends on the energy pricing policy of the country. A reform that removes the subsidies on fossil fuels will help promote the use of solar PV powered irrigation system significantly. Finally, Ethiopia is a country rich in renewable energy resources. Apart from solar energy, other sources of renewable energy available in Ethiopia include wind, geothermal, and micro-hydrology. There is also keen interest in investing in mini-grids. The approach developed in this study can be extended to accommodate these energy solutions, and this constitutes a topic that invites future research.
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spelling CGSpace1272192024-11-07T09:51:14Z Identifying energy solutions to support development of irrigated agriculture in Ethiopia Xie, Hua Mekonnen, Dawit Kelemework energy demand access services agricultural activities investment policies irrigation technology agricultural production resilience water power analysis groundwater irrigation development solar energy diesel fossil fuel reforms renewable energy agricultural products energy poverty water fossil fuels energy resources energy Sub-Saharan African countries have long been beset with energy poverty. While there are already many studies on how to improve access to modern energy services in the region, those energy planning analyses are dominated by residential energy demand, and not much attention has yet been paid to the productive use of energy in agriculture. This paper aims at filling this knowledge gap by presenting a country-level planning analysis in Ethiopia to inform investment decisions and policy discussions about the promotion of energy use in agriculture to support the development of irrigated agriculture in the country. Irrigation is considered as a promising option to boost agricultural production and enhance agricultural resilience in Ethiopia. However, the strong water-energy nexus in irrigated agriculture implies that irrigation development in Ethiopia is hampered by energy poverty. The challenging aspect of the planning analysis for productive use of energy in irrigated agriculture is that, in addition to access to energy, irrigation adoption is constrained by many other factors such as availability of water resources, land suitability, and market potential of irrigated crops. In this study, we put the analysis into an integrated irrigation-energy planning framework and used the integrated modelling approach to identify groundwater irrigation development potentials in Ethiopia under three energy solutions: grid-connected electricity, off-grid solar PV, and diesel energy The analysis shows that by 2030, there is a potential to add about 1.05 million hectares of groundwater irrigated area. Both on-grid and off-grid energy solutions will play an important role in the effort to develop groundwater-based irrigated agriculture in Ethiopia. Moreover, the application potential of the two off grid energy solutions(solar PV and diesel) critically depends on the energy pricing policy of the country. A reform that removes the subsidies on fossil fuels will help promote the use of solar PV powered irrigation system significantly. Finally, Ethiopia is a country rich in renewable energy resources. Apart from solar energy, other sources of renewable energy available in Ethiopia include wind, geothermal, and micro-hydrology. There is also keen interest in investing in mini-grids. The approach developed in this study can be extended to accommodate these energy solutions, and this constitutes a topic that invites future research. 2022-09-01 2023-01-16T15:21:18Z 2023-01-16T15:21:18Z Working Paper https://hdl.handle.net/10568/127219 en Open Access Applied Research Programme on Energy and Economic Growth Xie, Hua; and Mekonnen, Dawit Kelemework. 2022. Identifying energy solutions to support development of irrigated agriculture in Ethiopia. EEG Working Paper September 2022. https://www.energyeconomicgrowth.org/publication/working-paper-identifying-energy-solutions-support-development-irrigated-agriculture
spellingShingle energy demand
access
services
agricultural activities
investment
policies
irrigation
technology
agricultural production
resilience
water power
analysis
groundwater irrigation
development
solar energy
diesel
fossil fuel
reforms
renewable energy
agricultural products
energy poverty
water
fossil fuels
energy resources
energy
Xie, Hua
Mekonnen, Dawit Kelemework
Identifying energy solutions to support development of irrigated agriculture in Ethiopia
title Identifying energy solutions to support development of irrigated agriculture in Ethiopia
title_full Identifying energy solutions to support development of irrigated agriculture in Ethiopia
title_fullStr Identifying energy solutions to support development of irrigated agriculture in Ethiopia
title_full_unstemmed Identifying energy solutions to support development of irrigated agriculture in Ethiopia
title_short Identifying energy solutions to support development of irrigated agriculture in Ethiopia
title_sort identifying energy solutions to support development of irrigated agriculture in ethiopia
topic energy demand
access
services
agricultural activities
investment
policies
irrigation
technology
agricultural production
resilience
water power
analysis
groundwater irrigation
development
solar energy
diesel
fossil fuel
reforms
renewable energy
agricultural products
energy poverty
water
fossil fuels
energy resources
energy
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/127219
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