Irrigation schemes in sub-Saharan Africa don’t measure up to their plans according to new research into the projects by scientists.

2021-01-22_01Irrigation

Many of the schemes were found to be consistently delivering a much smaller area of irrigation or are completely broken and things aren’t improving.

Large-scale irrigation infrastructure projects are back on the development agenda in sub-Saharan Africa after a near 30-year hiatus, despite projects having had disappointing results, with social and environmental side effects outweighing benefits. Such projects are planned in response to water scarcity pressures and are seen as a solution to intensify agricultural production, support rural economic development and enhance resilience to climate change.

New Research, published in Nature, from a University of Manchester-led consortium quantified the performance of 79 African irrigation schemes. They did this by comparing planning documents to satellite-derived land cover maps to give the percentage of irrigation delivered and those that had stopped working. The found schemes are consistently underperforming and there have been no trends in project delivery success between 1948 and 2008.

Read more 

Noticias Relacionadas

Gen Z: How climate change is re-shaping the way the work

Read News

Severe Heatwaves Putting Lakes in Hot Water

Read News

Farms Following Soil-friendly Practices Grow Healthier Food, Study Suggests

Read News

Likelihood of Extreme Autumn Fire Weather Has Increased 40%, Oregon State Modeling Shows

Read News