Implications of water scarcity on agriculture in CWANA region: Limitations and potentials


Views
0% 0
Downloads
0 0%

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Date

2005-12-31

Date Issued

2005-12-31

Citation

Kamel Shideed. (31/12/2005). Implications of water scarcity on agriculture in CWANA region: Limitations and potentials, in "Food Security under Water Scarcity in the Middle East: Problems and Solutions". Italy: CIHEAM-IAM Bari.
All countries in Central and West Asia and North Africa CWANA region in general, and WANA region in particular, have faced severe challenges in increasing their agricultural production over the last 40 years. This is mainly due to many factors, including a limited natural resource base of arable land and water, low and volatile rainfall with frequent drought, growing population, low rates of productivity growth, increased rural-urban migration, low public and private investments in rainfed areas, weak extension systems, inappropriate agricultural policies, and low adoption rates of new technologies. CWANA has achieved a 2.9% annual growth rate in cereal production during the 1961— 2002 period. Most of the growth is attributed to productivity enhancement in the first place and to area expansion in the second place. Cereal yield and area grew by 1.5% and 1.3% during -the same period. - WANA countries alone had net cereal imports of 45.1 million tons in 1997. Cereal net imports are expected to increase to 73.1 million tons by 2020. Wheat imports alone, of 37.8 million tons, accounting for 52% of the total cereal net imports in 2020. Similarly, imports of livestock products are projected to increase substantially during the next two decades. The food consumption pattern is expected to change dramatically during the next 20 years in response to increases in population, per capita income, and changes in consumer preferences. Meat per capita consumption is projected to increase rapidly, by 29% for poultry and 19% for beef. Per capita consumption of other livestock products will increase as well. Milk and sheep/goat per capita consumption is expected to increase by 14% and 12%, respectively, between 1997 and 2020. Only the per capita consumption of two major cereal commodities, wheat, and maize, is projected to decrease by 2% and 16%, respectively. Available information on the water poverty index (WPI) and its sub-indices (resources, use, access, capacity, and environment) is used to monitor the performance of scarce water in the CWANA region. Although a negative association between resources and use is to be expected a priori (the more scarce the resources, the better use is made of them), the positive correlation between these two indicators of 0.30 suggests that water resources are misused in the CWANA region. Similarly, -the positive correlation of 0.21 between resources and environment is not consistent with a priori expectations of negative association (the more scarce the resources, the more attention is paid to conservation generally), indicating that water resources in the region are not sustainably managed. The negative correlation between resources and access sub-indices also contradicts what one might have expected, suggesting that people in the region do not have adequate access to the available water resources. There is a positive association between the WPI and the human development index (HD1) for CWANA countries. A similar positive correlation is found between WPI and the food security index (FSI). Preliminary results of regression analysis indicate that increasing WPI by 1% will increase per capita grain production by 4 Kg per year, thus contributing to increased food security. WPI sub-indices reveal that water availability (resources) is the most limiting factor to the development of the water sector in all CWANA countries, except Eritrea, Ethiopia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, and Sudan. For Eriteria and Ethiopia, improving population access to clean water and sanitation and enhancing access to irrigation would be more productive investments to improve the efficiency of the water sector. However, environmental attributes, such as water quality, water pollution, regulations, and information capacity are the priority areas for interventions in Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, and Sudan. Available information indicates that scarce water resources are poorly managed and inefficiently used in the dry areas of the CWANA region. Irrigation accounts for 80-90 percent of all water consumed in the region, thus, improving on-farm water-use efficiency (FWUE) can contribute directly to increased availability of water.

Author(s) ORCID(s)