Transcript Slide 1

Enough Water for Enough food?
Trends and Prospects in Water
Management for Agriculture
David Molden
IWMI
3500
One liter of water produces one calorie on average
Developed countries
in perCalories
Food
capita per day)
Supply (total calories
FoodSupply
3000
Threshold for national food security
World
Asia
2500
Sub-Saharan Africa
2000
1500
1961
1966
1971
1976
1981
1986
1991
1996
2001
2006
Will there be enough water?
More people – 6.5 to 9 billion people by 2050
More calories & more meat, fish, milk
More food production – need to double grain
production by 2050
More water for food – if practices don’t change,
water needs for agriculture will double
Something has to change
Water Scarcity and Climate Change
Some areas wetter, some areas drier
Investing in Irrigation
2.5
320
280
2.0
240
July 2008
Food price index
200
1.5
160
Irrigation
Jan
2009
Living Planet index
Freshwater
1.0
120
World Bank lending
for irrigation
80
0.5
40
Irrigation
in SSA
0
0
1960
1965
1970
1975
1980
1985
1990
1995
2000
2005
2010
Growth in Yields
IPCC – yields in SSA will decline by 50%
because of climate change
United States
It is possible to more than double yields in
SSA in spite of climate change.
China
Latin America
Sub-Saharan Africa
Key Trends in SSA
Rapid Water Development
• Hydropower/energy
• Rapid urban growth
• The role of China
• “Land and Water Grabs”
• Private sector – contract farming, markets
• Transboundary water concerns
• Growth of informal water economies
Informal
Water
Economies
Water
Management
Opportunities
Major Pathways
to Meet Future Food & Water Demands
1. Improve water productivity (more food/water)
– Irrigation systems
– Rainfed systems
2. Expand irrigated & rainfed agriculture
3. Promote trade from highly productive to less
productive regions
4. Manage demand, consume and waste less
Get water to poor people, use it better
Around 70% of the
world’s under-nourished
live in rural areas where
non-agricultural
livelihood options are
limited.
Improve and Safeguard
Water Access
Access to Technologies
Irrigation
potential
developed:
Egypt,
Morocco,
Somalia, South
Africa > 75%
Botswana,
Sudan,
Zimbabwe,
Madagascar,
Mali, Malawi,
Uganda 50-75%
Rest < 50%
% Irrigated
Land
INDIA:
~50
SSA:
5
Upgrade Water Management in Rainfed
Landscapes
Rainfed land has the highest potential for poverty
reduction and water productivity gains.
Upgrade Rainfed Agriculture with a range of water
management options – pumps, water harvesting,
soil moisture, supplemental irrigation, irrigation.
Making it happen
• Seek opportunities:
– AWM falls between institutional cracks
– Failure to focus on women
• Focus on agriculture, water access,
drinking water & hydropower
• Its not just about technologies, but
about markets, institutions, capacity
Thank you