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International Conference on Food Security in Drylands Doha November 15 2012 Water-Related Risks and Opportunities for Foreign Direct Investments in Africa Holger Hoff Stockholm Environment Institute Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research
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A new global freshwater assessment Blue water availability per capita Gerten et al 2011
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Blue plus green water availability per capita A new global freshwater assessment Gerten et al 2011
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A new global freshwater assessment Change in blue plus green water availability per capita – climate change A2, 2080, ensemble mean
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A new global freshwater assessment Crop water productivities (m 3 water required for producing 1000 kcal under current crop mix and management ! productivity gradient along the Nile basin !
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A new global freshwater assessment Water-limited food self sufficiency potential Gerten et al 2011
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largely semi-arid savanna systems Water situation in Sub-Saharan Africa UNEP 2004 only about 10% of rainfall becomes blue water (runoff and groundwater) very little of that blue water is tapped for agriculture or other purposes
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high variability and uncertainty about rainfall and seasonal water availability Brown et al 2006 -> need for additional water storage and irrigation Water situation in Sub-Saharan Africa variability and uncertainty are projected to increase with climate change (Hansen et al 2012) CoV monthly rainfall
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Lack of blue water storage (and other water infrastructure) Water situation in Sub-Saharan Africa Grey et al 2007 -> need for additional water storage and irrigation
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< 5% of agriculture is irrigated (compared to about 40% in South Asia) FAO 2004 Water situation in Sub-Saharan Africa -> need for additional water storage and irrigation
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Water situation in the Nile basin Green water availability per capita per subbasin - 2000 based on CPWF data
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Water situation in the Nile basin Green water availability per capita per subbasin - 2050 based on CPWF data
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Crop (water) productivity in the Blue Nile basin again: large productivity gradient -> win-win basin-wide solutions
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Effects of climate change: upper Blue Nile discharge Lopez 2012
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FDI risks – Ethiopia / Blue Nile Bossio et al 2012
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water effects often downstream (different from land impacts) most significant effects in the dry season when river flow is lowest, but irrigation demand peaks Our estimate of contracted areas: 1.76 million ha if fully irrigated, annual runoff in the Blue Nile may drop by 5-20 % Land Matrix estimate: 3-6 million ha FDI risks – Ethiopia / Blue Nile Bossio et al 2012
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investment / knowledge / technologies / are urgently needed, adapted to local conditions, providing local benefits FDI opportunities: sustainable intensification of irrigated AND rainfed agriculture RWH, Malesu, 2009Water spreading weirs, GIZ, 2012 “Large-scale farming is in most cases unlikely to be the most appropriate avenue for the commercialization of African agriculture” from: Awakening Africa‘s Sleeping Giant World Bank 2009
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investment / knowledge / technologies / are urgently needed, adapted to local conditions, providing local benefits as well as other inputs and interventions, e.g. integrated fertilizer & pest management, „green agriculture“ solutions not only large-scale blue water infrastructure, but also scalable interventions across the green-to-blue spectrum, e.g. rainwater harvesting and storage, spreading weirs, etc FDI opportunities: sustainable intensification of irrigated AND rainfed agriculture RWH, Malesu, 2009Water spreading weirs, GIZ, 2012 Thank you !
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