‘Irrigation-Plus’ 'Health, wealth, and gender issues’ by Barbara van Koppen & Eline Boelee.
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Transcript of ‘Irrigation-Plus’ 'Health, wealth, and gender issues’ by Barbara van Koppen & Eline Boelee.
Irrigation for pro-poor growth 1960s
Agriculture as engine for economic growth: ‘trickle-up’ poverty eradication through economic growth (IFAD)
Irrigation as driver of Asian Green Revolution
Smallholders: higher production, higher incomes, more wellbeing
Wage laborers: labor creation (also for women)
Net food buyers: lower prices
Multiplier effects
Targeting matters
Irrigation for pro-poor growthafter 2000
Agriculture out of fashion – swinging back now in Africa; Growing competition by world markets? Import protection ?
A range of forms of water management in agriculture – year-round storage, individual appropriate technologies, rainwater harvesting/soil moisture retention, rainfed agriculture
Irrigation – plus:• the step• large-scale irrigation in arid areas• homestead sufficiency
Irrigation - plus
• Livestock, gardening, tree growing, fisheries, crafts, industries: higher values of irrigation schemes• Domestic uses: main benefit for women• Incremental capital costs: 10-15 percent• Rehabilitation: irrigation-plus by design, building on de facto mus
Thailand National Policy:‘Economic sufficiency’
Farmers’ wisdom networks :
Bottom-up testing and upscaling of multiple water uses from multiple sources
South Africa
MaTshepo Khumbane grassroots activist, Eva Masha, Emily Masha Strydkraal
Department of Water Affairs and Forestry • Subsidies for household tanks• National guidelines for Multiple-use approaches by local
government
Family 5-year food security “helicopter plan”
House water recycling
Food gardening
Family time management
Eva digging her dam
Emily’s triumph
16 Oct 2003: Awareness!catching the first rain
Oct-Nov 2003: digging storage to catch more
19 Jan 2004: “We have buried the hunger”
Water Quality
Medical science norms and mandates: ‘illegal’
1980s:
Many water sources sufficiently clean, also seepage
Water quantity more important for health and hygiene than water quality
Go for incremental improvements instead of imposing unrealistic norms
Water quantity
Irrigation planners: ‘domestic uses are negligible volumes’
Issue is year-round availability and siting
Competition for new systems and in dry season?
Gender in participatory planning
Example: SADC IWRM demonstration projects
Zambia: WWF
Katuba and Namwala communities
in Kafue basin
Gender in IWRM
Domestic: sharing the unpaid chores
Productive: equal opportunities for women and men
Irrigation for pro-poor growth
Agriculture as engine for economic growth
Irrigation as driver of Asian Green Revolution
Smallholders: higher production, higher incomes, more wellbeing
Wage laborers: labor creation (also for women)
Net food buyers: lower prices
Targeting matters
Investments in a range of water management in agriculture
World markets? Import protection?