Institutions and policy in the Blue Nile Basin: understanding challenges and opportunities for improved land and water management.

In the past decades, both upstream and downstream countries ofthe Blue Nile Basin (BNB) had developed and adopted several policies and strategies related to land and water management. Yet there are important policy and institutional gaps that irnpeded adoption of improved land and water management s...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Haileslassie, Amare, Hagos, Fitsum, Awulachew, Seleshi Bekele, Peden, Donald G., Ahmed, A.A., Gebreselassie, S., Tafesse, T., Mapedza, Everisto D., Mukherji, Aditi
Formato: Capítulo de libro
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Routledge 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/34721
_version_ 1855537540361093120
author Haileslassie, Amare
Hagos, Fitsum
Awulachew, Seleshi Bekele
Peden, Donald G.
Ahmed, A.A.
Gebreselassie, S.
Tafesse, T.
Mapedza, Everisto D.
Mukherji, Aditi
author_browse Ahmed, A.A.
Awulachew, Seleshi Bekele
Gebreselassie, S.
Hagos, Fitsum
Haileslassie, Amare
Mapedza, Everisto D.
Mukherji, Aditi
Peden, Donald G.
Tafesse, T.
author_facet Haileslassie, Amare
Hagos, Fitsum
Awulachew, Seleshi Bekele
Peden, Donald G.
Ahmed, A.A.
Gebreselassie, S.
Tafesse, T.
Mapedza, Everisto D.
Mukherji, Aditi
author_sort Haileslassie, Amare
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description In the past decades, both upstream and downstream countries ofthe Blue Nile Basin (BNB) had developed and adopted several policies and strategies related to land and water management. Yet there are important policy and institutional gaps that irnpeded adoption of improved land and water management strategies. An example of these gaps is the lack of upstream-downstream linkage and incentive-based policy enforcement mechanisms. In spite of long-standing efforts in improving land and water management in the BNB, achievements have been negligible to date. This is accounted for by land and water management policy and institutional gaps mentioned above. Addressing these gaps only at local level may impact the basin communities at large. Therefore, institutional arrangements need to be built across different scales (nested from local to international) that build trust, facilitate the exchange of information and enable effective monitoring required for successful water resources management (e.g. dam operation, cost and benefit sharing, demand management). Payment for environmental services (PES) is a potential incentive-based policy entorcement mechanism for improved land and water management and conflict resolution between upstream and downstream users both at the local scale and in the BN13 at large. This potential must be comprehended to bring about a win-win scenario in upstream and downstream parts of the BNB. Financing improved land and water management practices is an expensive venture and mostly within a long-term period of retums. A fully farmer-financed PES scheme may not be financially feasible (at least in the short term). Therefore, options for user and state cofinancing must be sought.
format Book Chapter
id CGSpace34721
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2012
publishDateRange 2012
publishDateSort 2012
publisher Routledge
publisherStr Routledge
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace347212025-03-25T02:10:43Z Institutions and policy in the Blue Nile Basin: understanding challenges and opportunities for improved land and water management. Haileslassie, Amare Hagos, Fitsum Awulachew, Seleshi Bekele Peden, Donald G. Ahmed, A.A. Gebreselassie, S. Tafesse, T. Mapedza, Everisto D. Mukherji, Aditi land management water mangement policies institutions institutional reform ecosystem services payment agreements financing In the past decades, both upstream and downstream countries ofthe Blue Nile Basin (BNB) had developed and adopted several policies and strategies related to land and water management. Yet there are important policy and institutional gaps that irnpeded adoption of improved land and water management strategies. An example of these gaps is the lack of upstream-downstream linkage and incentive-based policy enforcement mechanisms. In spite of long-standing efforts in improving land and water management in the BNB, achievements have been negligible to date. This is accounted for by land and water management policy and institutional gaps mentioned above. Addressing these gaps only at local level may impact the basin communities at large. Therefore, institutional arrangements need to be built across different scales (nested from local to international) that build trust, facilitate the exchange of information and enable effective monitoring required for successful water resources management (e.g. dam operation, cost and benefit sharing, demand management). Payment for environmental services (PES) is a potential incentive-based policy entorcement mechanism for improved land and water management and conflict resolution between upstream and downstream users both at the local scale and in the BN13 at large. This potential must be comprehended to bring about a win-win scenario in upstream and downstream parts of the BNB. Financing improved land and water management practices is an expensive venture and mostly within a long-term period of retums. A fully farmer-financed PES scheme may not be financially feasible (at least in the short term). Therefore, options for user and state cofinancing must be sought. 2012 2013-11-21T08:41:26Z 2014-02-02T16:39:50Z 2013-11-21T08:41:26Z 2014-02-02T16:39:50Z Book Chapter https://hdl.handle.net/10568/34721 en Open Access application/pdf Routledge Haileslassie, A.; Hagos, Fitsum; Awulachew, Seleshi Bekele; Peden D.; Ahmed, A. A.; Gebreselassie, S.; Tafesse, T.; Mapedza, Everisto; Mukherji, Aditi. 2012. Institutions and policy in the Blue Nile Basin: understanding challenges and opportunities for improved land and water management. In Awulachew, Seleshi Bekele; Smakhtin, Vladimir; Molden, David; Peden D. (Eds.). The Nile River Basin: water, agriculture, governance and livelihoods. Abingdon, UK: Routledge. pp.253-268.
spellingShingle land management
water mangement
policies
institutions
institutional reform
ecosystem services
payment agreements
financing
Haileslassie, Amare
Hagos, Fitsum
Awulachew, Seleshi Bekele
Peden, Donald G.
Ahmed, A.A.
Gebreselassie, S.
Tafesse, T.
Mapedza, Everisto D.
Mukherji, Aditi
Institutions and policy in the Blue Nile Basin: understanding challenges and opportunities for improved land and water management.
title Institutions and policy in the Blue Nile Basin: understanding challenges and opportunities for improved land and water management.
title_full Institutions and policy in the Blue Nile Basin: understanding challenges and opportunities for improved land and water management.
title_fullStr Institutions and policy in the Blue Nile Basin: understanding challenges and opportunities for improved land and water management.
title_full_unstemmed Institutions and policy in the Blue Nile Basin: understanding challenges and opportunities for improved land and water management.
title_short Institutions and policy in the Blue Nile Basin: understanding challenges and opportunities for improved land and water management.
title_sort institutions and policy in the blue nile basin understanding challenges and opportunities for improved land and water management
topic land management
water mangement
policies
institutions
institutional reform
ecosystem services
payment agreements
financing
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/34721
work_keys_str_mv AT haileslassieamare institutionsandpolicyinthebluenilebasinunderstandingchallengesandopportunitiesforimprovedlandandwatermanagement
AT hagosfitsum institutionsandpolicyinthebluenilebasinunderstandingchallengesandopportunitiesforimprovedlandandwatermanagement
AT awulachewseleshibekele institutionsandpolicyinthebluenilebasinunderstandingchallengesandopportunitiesforimprovedlandandwatermanagement
AT pedendonaldg institutionsandpolicyinthebluenilebasinunderstandingchallengesandopportunitiesforimprovedlandandwatermanagement
AT ahmedaa institutionsandpolicyinthebluenilebasinunderstandingchallengesandopportunitiesforimprovedlandandwatermanagement
AT gebreselassies institutionsandpolicyinthebluenilebasinunderstandingchallengesandopportunitiesforimprovedlandandwatermanagement
AT tafesset institutionsandpolicyinthebluenilebasinunderstandingchallengesandopportunitiesforimprovedlandandwatermanagement
AT mapedzaeveristod institutionsandpolicyinthebluenilebasinunderstandingchallengesandopportunitiesforimprovedlandandwatermanagement
AT mukherjiaditi institutionsandpolicyinthebluenilebasinunderstandingchallengesandopportunitiesforimprovedlandandwatermanagement