hidden
Image Database Export Citations

Menu:

Water Variability, Soil Nutrient Heterogeneity and Market Volatility: Why Sub-Saharan Africa's Green Revolution Will Be Location-Specific and Knowledge-Intensive

Show full item record

Type: Journal Article
Author: Van Der Zaag, Pieter
Journal: Water Alternatives
Volume: 3
Page(s): 154-160
Date: 2010
URI: https://hdl.handle.net/10535/6715
Sector: Agriculture
Water Resource & Irrigation
Region: Africa
Subject(s): irrigation
investment
food supply
agriculture
policy analysis
Abstract: "In his interesting Viewpoint article in Water Alternatives, Bruce Lankford suggests that an African Green Revolution cannot come about without irrigation. But he does not convincingly explain why irrigated areas expand only very slowly. This viewpoint article argues that grain yields have remained stagnant in Africa because of high temporal rainfall variability, significant spatial soil nutrient heterogeneity, and weak and volatile markets. This combination calls for location-specific interventions that are aimed at enhancing farmers’ capacity to buffer water variations and address nutrient deficits. This finding is consistent with what Lankford dismisses as an "atomised" approach, but which would preferably be called a farmer-centred approach. Thus a massive investment in African agriculture is indeed required, primarily focused on the creation of knowledge that does justice to the local variation in water and nutrient availability. It should aim to empower farmers to experiment and be innovative, and remake agricultural extension and agricultural engineering exciting with cutting-edge disciplines. Irrigation may then emerge as the right thing to do."

Files in this item

Files Size Format View
water variability.pdf 398.6Kb PDF View/Open

This item appears in the following document type(s)

Show full item record