Prospects for improving irrigated agriculture in Southern Africa: linking water, energy and food

Increasing agricultural productivity has always been a prominent feature on the regional agenda due to a high incidence of food and nutrition insecurity. This review assessed the current status of irrigated agriculture in southern Africa from a water–energy–food (WEF) nexus perspective. Gaps and opp...

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Main Authors: Mabhaudhi, Tafadzwanashe, Mpandeli, S., Nhamo, Luxon, Chimonyo, Vimbayi Grace Petrova, Nhemachena, Charles, Senzanje, Aidan, Naidoo, D., Modi, Albert Thembinkosi
Format: Journal Article
Language:Inglés
Published: MDPI 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/99025
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author Mabhaudhi, Tafadzwanashe
Mpandeli, S.
Nhamo, Luxon
Chimonyo, Vimbayi Grace Petrova
Nhemachena, Charles
Senzanje, Aidan
Naidoo, D.
Modi, Albert Thembinkosi
author_browse Chimonyo, Vimbayi Grace Petrova
Mabhaudhi, Tafadzwanashe
Modi, Albert Thembinkosi
Mpandeli, S.
Naidoo, D.
Nhamo, Luxon
Nhemachena, Charles
Senzanje, Aidan
author_facet Mabhaudhi, Tafadzwanashe
Mpandeli, S.
Nhamo, Luxon
Chimonyo, Vimbayi Grace Petrova
Nhemachena, Charles
Senzanje, Aidan
Naidoo, D.
Modi, Albert Thembinkosi
author_sort Mabhaudhi, Tafadzwanashe
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Increasing agricultural productivity has always been a prominent feature on the regional agenda due to a high incidence of food and nutrition insecurity. This review assessed the current status of irrigated agriculture in southern Africa from a water–energy–food (WEF) nexus perspective. Gaps and opportunities for improving irrigated agriculture within the context of the WEF nexus were also assessed in terms of the feasible limits to which they can be exploited. Southern Africa faces water scarcity, and climate projections show that member states will face increased physical and/or economic water scarcity by as early as 2025, which will have negative impacts on water, energy and food production. Recurrent droughts experienced across the region reaffirm the sensitive issues of food and energy insecurity as well as water scarcity. Projections of an increasing population within the region indicate increased water, energy and food demand. With agriculture already accounting for about 70% of water withdrawals, increasing the area under irrigation will place additional demand on already strained energy grids and scarce water resources. This poses the question—is increasing irrigated agriculture a solution to improving water access, food security and energy supply? While there are prospects for increasing the area under irrigation and subsequent improvement in agricultural productivity, adopting a WEF nexus approach in doing so would mitigate trade-offs and unintended consequences. Consideration of the WEF nexus in integrated resources planning and management eliminates the possibilities of transferring problems from one sector to other, as it manages synergies and trade-offs. While it is acknowledged that improving water productivity in irrigated agriculture could reduce water and energy use while increasing yield output, there is a need to decide how such savings would then be reallocated. Any intervention to increase the irrigated area should be done in the context of a WEF nexus analytical framework to guide policy and decision-making. Technical planning should evolve around the WEF nexus approach in setting targets, as WEF nexus indicators would reveal the performance and impact of proposed interventions on any of the three WEF nexus components.
format Journal Article
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publishDate 2018
publishDateRange 2018
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spelling CGSpace990252025-03-11T09:50:20Z Prospects for improving irrigated agriculture in Southern Africa: linking water, energy and food Mabhaudhi, Tafadzwanashe Mpandeli, S. Nhamo, Luxon Chimonyo, Vimbayi Grace Petrova Nhemachena, Charles Senzanje, Aidan Naidoo, D. Modi, Albert Thembinkosi farming systems small scale farming irrigated farming agriculture food security food insecurity food production water productivity water accounting energy resources nexus infrastructure dams smallholders farmers capacity building Increasing agricultural productivity has always been a prominent feature on the regional agenda due to a high incidence of food and nutrition insecurity. This review assessed the current status of irrigated agriculture in southern Africa from a water–energy–food (WEF) nexus perspective. Gaps and opportunities for improving irrigated agriculture within the context of the WEF nexus were also assessed in terms of the feasible limits to which they can be exploited. Southern Africa faces water scarcity, and climate projections show that member states will face increased physical and/or economic water scarcity by as early as 2025, which will have negative impacts on water, energy and food production. Recurrent droughts experienced across the region reaffirm the sensitive issues of food and energy insecurity as well as water scarcity. Projections of an increasing population within the region indicate increased water, energy and food demand. With agriculture already accounting for about 70% of water withdrawals, increasing the area under irrigation will place additional demand on already strained energy grids and scarce water resources. This poses the question—is increasing irrigated agriculture a solution to improving water access, food security and energy supply? While there are prospects for increasing the area under irrigation and subsequent improvement in agricultural productivity, adopting a WEF nexus approach in doing so would mitigate trade-offs and unintended consequences. Consideration of the WEF nexus in integrated resources planning and management eliminates the possibilities of transferring problems from one sector to other, as it manages synergies and trade-offs. While it is acknowledged that improving water productivity in irrigated agriculture could reduce water and energy use while increasing yield output, there is a need to decide how such savings would then be reallocated. Any intervention to increase the irrigated area should be done in the context of a WEF nexus analytical framework to guide policy and decision-making. Technical planning should evolve around the WEF nexus approach in setting targets, as WEF nexus indicators would reveal the performance and impact of proposed interventions on any of the three WEF nexus components. 2018-12-19 2019-01-10T04:24:52Z 2019-01-10T04:24:52Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/99025 en Open Access MDPI Mabhaudhi, T.; Mpandeli, S.; Nhamo, Luxon; Chimonyo, V. G. P.; Nhemachena, Charles; Senzanje, A.; Naidoo, D.; Modi, A. T. 2018. Prospects for improving irrigated agriculture in Southern Africa: linking water, energy and food. Water, 10(12):1-16. doi: 10.3390/w10121881
spellingShingle farming systems
small scale farming
irrigated farming
agriculture
food security
food insecurity
food production
water productivity
water accounting
energy resources
nexus
infrastructure
dams
smallholders
farmers
capacity building
Mabhaudhi, Tafadzwanashe
Mpandeli, S.
Nhamo, Luxon
Chimonyo, Vimbayi Grace Petrova
Nhemachena, Charles
Senzanje, Aidan
Naidoo, D.
Modi, Albert Thembinkosi
Prospects for improving irrigated agriculture in Southern Africa: linking water, energy and food
title Prospects for improving irrigated agriculture in Southern Africa: linking water, energy and food
title_full Prospects for improving irrigated agriculture in Southern Africa: linking water, energy and food
title_fullStr Prospects for improving irrigated agriculture in Southern Africa: linking water, energy and food
title_full_unstemmed Prospects for improving irrigated agriculture in Southern Africa: linking water, energy and food
title_short Prospects for improving irrigated agriculture in Southern Africa: linking water, energy and food
title_sort prospects for improving irrigated agriculture in southern africa linking water energy and food
topic farming systems
small scale farming
irrigated farming
agriculture
food security
food insecurity
food production
water productivity
water accounting
energy resources
nexus
infrastructure
dams
smallholders
farmers
capacity building
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/99025
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