Scaling Up Agricultural Water Development in Sub-Saharan
Africa
Ouagadougou Call For Action
(March 28, 2007)
Over
130 experts and managers from 321 African countries
and their development partners met in Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso from 26-28
March 2007 to promote Agricultural Water Development (AWD), strategic planning
and investment preparation in order to revitalize interest in AW investment
in Sub-Saharan Africa. The meeting was convened by five development partners
- AfDB, FAO, IFAD, IWMI and World Bank - at the occasion of the completion
of a report “Investment in Agricultural Water for Poverty Reduction and Economic
Growth in Sub-Saharan Africa” as part of the Collaborative Program on AWD.
The meeting was hosted by ARID2.
A Daunting Poverty Reduction Challenge
Although
the world as a whole is roughly on track to do so, Sub-Saharan Africa is unlikely
on present trends to reach Target 1 of the MDGs - i.e. to halve, by 2015,
the number of people living on less than $1 a day. Indeed, if nothing changes,
the absolute numbers of poor in the region will continue to increase and by
2015 close to half the world’s poor will live in this region.
Eighty-five
percent of Sub-Saharan Africa’s poor live in the rural areas and depend largely
on agriculture for their livelihoods. Agricultural growth is therefore clearly
key to alleviating poverty and to driving economic growth. Yet Agriculture
in the region remains a largely subsistence activity, production has not kept
pace with population growth, food security has declined, the household income
required to afford more bought-in food has not been generated and the numbers
of malnourished people are consequently rising. Rainfall variability adversely
affects rainfed production, and this is likely to become aggravated by climate
change.
Investment
in agricultural water can contribute to agricultural growth and reduce poverty
directly by : (a) permitting intensification and diversification and hence
increased farm outputs and incomes ; (b) increasing agricultural wages ; and
(c) reducing local food prices and hence improving real net incomes. It can
also reduce poverty indirectly via increased rural and urban employment as
a result of multiplier effects on growth in rural and urban non-farm economies.
Untapped Potential
Sub-Saharan
Africa’s agricultural water remains underdeveloped : there are only 9 million
ha of land under water management in the region today, representing just 5%
of the total cultivated area- by far the lowest proportion of any region in
the world. Water withdrawals for agriculture are less than 3% of total renewable
resources, and although a number of basins are currently experiencing, or
are approaching, water scarcity this is mainly because of a lack of adequate
water storage, institutional management capacity and transboundary organizations
following integrated water resources management (IWRM) approaches, rather
than absolute scarcity.
One
of the reasons for underdevelopment of the sector is that there has in the
past been a lack of strategic vision linking agricultural water development
to poverty reduction and growth. Even though most poverty reduction strategies
are predicated on agricultural growth, agricultural water development has
generally not been seen as a vehicle for achieving this ; consequently it has
had a low profile in Poverty Reduction Strategy Papers (PRSPs).
1 Benin, Burkina Faso, Burundi, Cameroun, Chad, Cote d’Ivoire,
DRC, Egypt, Ethiopia, Gambia, Ghana, Guinea, Kenya, Libya, Madagascar, Mauritania,
Malawi, Mali, Morocco, Mozambique, Namibia, Niger, Nigeria, Rwanda, Senegal,
Swaziland, Tanzania, Togo, Tunisia, Uganda, Sudan, Zambia.
2 Association Régionale de l’Irrigation et du Drainage
The Meeting :
(i) Aware that agricultural water development
in sub-Saharan Africa can only make an important contribution to poverty reduction
and growth when investments are profitable at the farm level, economically
viable, socially acceptable and environmentally sustainable ;
(ii) Realizing that, while there is a
potential for a five-fold expansion of the irrigated area, the constraints
to this development are mainly economic and institutional ;
(iii) Noting also that a range of low-cost
rainwater management technologies (rainwater harvesting, soil moisture conservation,
etc.) and potential is available for stabilizing and increasing the crop yields
and farmer incomes in rainfed agriculture ;
(iv) Acknowledging that investment in
agricultural water is not on its own sufficient to ensure optimal yields,
productivity and incomes but needs to be part of a market-driven comprehensive
package (research, technical, economic, trade, institutional) that enables
farmers to maximize productivity and profitability ;
(v) Recognizing that organizational
arrangements for project design, implementation and management are more efficient
when they reflect the comparative advantages of the public sector, farmers,
NGOs and the private sector ;
(vi) Realizing that agricultural water
development investments should be designed in such a way that they address
all stakeholders (including the poor and women), ensuring that all parties
benefit to their mutual advantage, and that socio-economic benefits are maximized
whilst negative environmental and health impacts are minimized ;
(vii) Appreciating that appropriate institutional
reforms that give priority to farmer empowerment enhance the performance of
agricultural water development and its contribution to sustainable agricultural
growth and poverty reduction, but that they need to be accompanied by effective
capacity building ;
(viii) Regretting the absence of an action
oriented strategy for agricultural water development in some countries, their
incoherent implementation in others, as well as the existence of trade and
non-trade barriers ;
(ix) Taking note of past experience from
agricultural water development and cognizant of the lessons learned ;
Recommends that :
1. The Governments of Sub-Saharan African
countries and their development partners should promote national agricultural
water development strategies that recognize (a) the potential contribution
of agricultural water to poverty reduction and growth, (b) the imperatives
of farm level profitability and economic viability, and, (c) the need for
a conducive institutional environment ;
2. The Governments of Sub-Saharan African
countries and their development partners should increase investment in
agricultural water development and institutional reforms in accordance
with the Maputo Declaration of the African Ministers of Agriculture, including
reforms to macro-economic policies, legal frameworks and organizations for
agricultural water. This may involve integrating or better coordinating the
responsibilities of government organizations for infrastructure development
with those for irrigated farming and enhanced aid harmonization ; developing
the instruments needed for Public-Private Partnerships (PPPs) ; making transparent
the role of farmers in cost sharing and in operation and maintenance whilst
building capacities for farmer organizations, public agencies and professional
regional and national organizations (such as ARID), the establishment of which
should be promoted in other Africa sub-regions.
3. The Governments of Sub-Saharan African
countries and their development partners should invest only in viable and
sustainable projects and should design for maximum profitability, poverty
reduction and growth by avoiding long-term and unsustainable subsidies,
by providing agricultural water as part of a comprehensive development package
that is linked to markets, by promoting effective intra-regional trade, by
ensuring that the proposed management arrangements are sustainable, and by
inclusively targeting the poor and women, whilst minimizing negative environmental
and health impacts.