Impacts of small built infrastructure in inland valleys in Burkina Faso and Mali: rationale for a systems approach that thinks beyond rice?

The potential to increase agricultural production in inland valleys in West Africa has received a good degree of attention in both national development strategies and academic literature, and improving agriculture productivity in inland valleys has been an active area of donor engagement. Despite th...

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Autores principales: Katic, Pamela G., Lautze, Jonathan F., Namara, Regassa E.
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Elsevier 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/69033
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author Katic, Pamela G.
Lautze, Jonathan F.
Namara, Regassa E.
author_browse Katic, Pamela G.
Lautze, Jonathan F.
Namara, Regassa E.
author_facet Katic, Pamela G.
Lautze, Jonathan F.
Namara, Regassa E.
author_sort Katic, Pamela G.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description The potential to increase agricultural production in inland valleys in West Africa has received a good degree of attention in both national development strategies and academic literature, and improving agriculture productivity in inland valleys has been an active area of donor engagement. Despite this attention, documentation of the degree to which benefits are enhanced through construction of built water storage infrastructure in such sites is somewhat scant. This paper examines evidence from eight inland valley sites with recently-built water retention infrastructure (4 in southwest Burkina Faso, 4 in southeast Mali) to determine how economic returns derived from agricultural production have changed through built infrastructure construction. Farmer interviews were undertaken at each site to identify costs and benefits of agricultural production before and after small built infrastructure construction. Overall results indicate that net present value increased substantially after built infrastructure was constructed. The results nonetheless highlight substantial variation in economic impacts across sites. A central variable explaining such variation appears to be the degree to which water retention is exploited for groundwater-based offseason cultivation. These findings will help development planners to better predict the degree and nature of change engendered by water storage projects in inland valley sites, and help to ground-truth grand statements about the development potential of this piece of natural infrastructure.
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spelling CGSpace690332025-12-08T09:54:28Z Impacts of small built infrastructure in inland valleys in Burkina Faso and Mali: rationale for a systems approach that thinks beyond rice? Katic, Pamela G. Lautze, Jonathan F. Namara, Regassa E. water storage irrigation agricultural production rice valleys infrastructure economic aspects cost benefit analysis finance investment farmers off season cultivation soil gender The potential to increase agricultural production in inland valleys in West Africa has received a good degree of attention in both national development strategies and academic literature, and improving agriculture productivity in inland valleys has been an active area of donor engagement. Despite this attention, documentation of the degree to which benefits are enhanced through construction of built water storage infrastructure in such sites is somewhat scant. This paper examines evidence from eight inland valley sites with recently-built water retention infrastructure (4 in southwest Burkina Faso, 4 in southeast Mali) to determine how economic returns derived from agricultural production have changed through built infrastructure construction. Farmer interviews were undertaken at each site to identify costs and benefits of agricultural production before and after small built infrastructure construction. Overall results indicate that net present value increased substantially after built infrastructure was constructed. The results nonetheless highlight substantial variation in economic impacts across sites. A central variable explaining such variation appears to be the degree to which water retention is exploited for groundwater-based offseason cultivation. These findings will help development planners to better predict the degree and nature of change engendered by water storage projects in inland valley sites, and help to ground-truth grand statements about the development potential of this piece of natural infrastructure. 2014 2015-11-27T10:24:41Z 2015-11-27T10:24:41Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/69033 en Limited Access Elsevier Katic, P., Lautze, J., & Namara, R. E. (2014). Impacts of small built infrastructure in inland valleys in Burkina Faso and Mali: Rationale for a systems approach that thinks beyond rice? In Physics and Chemistry of the Earth, Parts A/B/C (Vols. 76–78, pp. 83–97). Elsevier BV. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.pce.2014.11.010
spellingShingle water storage
irrigation
agricultural production
rice
valleys
infrastructure
economic aspects
cost benefit analysis
finance
investment
farmers
off season cultivation
soil
gender
Katic, Pamela G.
Lautze, Jonathan F.
Namara, Regassa E.
Impacts of small built infrastructure in inland valleys in Burkina Faso and Mali: rationale for a systems approach that thinks beyond rice?
title Impacts of small built infrastructure in inland valleys in Burkina Faso and Mali: rationale for a systems approach that thinks beyond rice?
title_full Impacts of small built infrastructure in inland valleys in Burkina Faso and Mali: rationale for a systems approach that thinks beyond rice?
title_fullStr Impacts of small built infrastructure in inland valleys in Burkina Faso and Mali: rationale for a systems approach that thinks beyond rice?
title_full_unstemmed Impacts of small built infrastructure in inland valleys in Burkina Faso and Mali: rationale for a systems approach that thinks beyond rice?
title_short Impacts of small built infrastructure in inland valleys in Burkina Faso and Mali: rationale for a systems approach that thinks beyond rice?
title_sort impacts of small built infrastructure in inland valleys in burkina faso and mali rationale for a systems approach that thinks beyond rice
topic water storage
irrigation
agricultural production
rice
valleys
infrastructure
economic aspects
cost benefit analysis
finance
investment
farmers
off season cultivation
soil
gender
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/69033
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AT namararegassae impactsofsmallbuiltinfrastructureininlandvalleysinburkinafasoandmalirationaleforasystemsapproachthatthinksbeyondrice