Treadle pump irrigation and poverty in Ghana

Treadle pump irrigation and poverty in Ghana
Title Treadle pump irrigation and poverty in Ghana PDF eBook
Author Adeoti, Adeoti, Barry, Boubacar, Namara, Regassa, Kamara, Abdul, Titiati, Atsu
Publisher IWMI
Pages 34
Release 2007
Genre Feed-water pumps
ISBN 9290906715

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Treadle pump (TP) technology has been promoted by Enterprise Works Worldwide (EWW) as an alternative to the traditional rope and bucket irrigation that is necessary to overcome the challenge of uncertain and inadequate rainfall for agricultural production. The aim is to improve output, increase incomes and reduce poverty among farm households. This study examines the strategies used for dissemination of the TP and the dynamics of its adoption and impacts, with a special focus on poverty reduction. The results of the study reveal that time and labor savings for irrigation, increased size of irrigated areas and lack of fuel requirements are the attractive features of the TP for those who adopt it. Adoption of TP increases land and labor productivities; and also net farm incomes. The study also demonstrates that adoption of the TP reduces poverty.

Irrigated Urban Vegetable Production in Ghana: Characteristics, Benefits and Risk Mitigation

Irrigated Urban Vegetable Production in Ghana: Characteristics, Benefits and Risk Mitigation
Title Irrigated Urban Vegetable Production in Ghana: Characteristics, Benefits and Risk Mitigation PDF eBook
Author Pay Drechsel
Publisher IWMI
Pages 249
Release 2014-09-17
Genre Irrigation farming
ISBN 9290907983

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Smallholder irrigation technology diffusion in Ghana: Insights from stakeholder mapping

Smallholder irrigation technology diffusion in Ghana: Insights from stakeholder mapping
Title Smallholder irrigation technology diffusion in Ghana: Insights from stakeholder mapping PDF eBook
Author Atuobi-Yeboah, Afua
Publisher Intl Food Policy Res Inst
Pages 40
Release 2020-11-12
Genre Political Science
ISBN

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Irrigated agriculture can support food and nutrition security, increase rural employment and incomes and can act as a buffer against growing climate variability and change. However, irrigation development has been slow in Africa south of the Sahara and Ghana is no exception. Out of a total potential irrigated area of close to 2 million ha, less than 20,000 ha large-scale irrigation and less than 200,000 ha of small-scale irrigation have been developed; but the latter is only an estimate. To identify entry points for accelerating small-scale irrigation development in Ghana, a national and a regional stakeholder Net-Map workshop were held in Accra and Tamale, respectively. The workshops suggest that a wide variety of actors from government, the private sector, international organizations and funders, research organizations and NGOs are involved in the diffusion of small-scale irrigation technologies. However, there are important differences between actors perceived to be key at the national and at the regional levels in northern Ghana. At the national level, diffusion of small-scale irrigation technologies is considered to be largely influenced by the Ghana Irrigation Development Authority together with a series of private sector actors focused on importation, distribution and financing of technologies. Farmers are considered to have no influence over the diffusion of small-scale irrigation, suggesting that small-scale irrigation is largely considered a supply-driven process. In northern Ghana, on the other hand, farmers are considered to be key influencers, although participants noted that much of this was potential influence, together with a larger and more diversified set of government stakeholders that are seen as regulators and possibly gatekeepers. For irrigation diffusion to successfully move from importation to distribution to benefiting smallholder farmers, all of these actors have to come together to better understand farmers’ needs and challenges. A multi-stakeholder platform could help to increase communication between farmers as the ultimate beneficiaries of small-scale irrigation technologies and the many other actors interested in supporting this process.

Reducing Poverty through Investments in Agricultural Water Management

Reducing Poverty through Investments in Agricultural Water Management
Title Reducing Poverty through Investments in Agricultural Water Management PDF eBook
Author Van Koppen, Barbara
Publisher IWMI
Pages 84
Release 2005
Genre Water-supply, Agricultural
ISBN 9290906154

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The overall goal of the Collaborative Program on ‘Investments in Agricultural Water Management in Sub-Saharan Africa’ is to contribute to broad-based sustainable poverty reduction and smallholder agricultural growth. The component on ‘Poverty considerations in investments in agricultural water management’ focuses in more detail on poverty and gender dimensions. It consists of two parts. The first part is thematic and elaborates poverty and gender issues emerging from the literature that complement the other components of the Collaborative Program. Part two is empirical. Acknowledging the lack of empirical data on poverty impacts of investments in agricultural water management, the Collaborative Program initiated case studies throughout Sub-Saharan Africa. Eight case studies on ‘Agricultural Water Development for Poverty Reduction in Eastern and Southern Africa’, for which the field research was conducted in 2003/2004, were supported by IFAD (Peacock,2005). Further, the African Development Bank supported three case studies in West Africa in 2004, two by Kamara et al. (2004), and one by Babatunde Omilola (2005). Part two synthesizes the empirical findings of these case studies.

Typology of irrigation systems in Ghana

Typology of irrigation systems in Ghana
Title Typology of irrigation systems in Ghana PDF eBook
Author Namara, Regassa E.
Publisher IWMI
Pages 40
Release 2011-06-27
Genre
ISBN 9290907398

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Interest in African irrigation investment is growing. However, irrigation is not a monolithic concept, and the opportunities and risks can vary substantially by approach. To help provide an understanding of the variation, this paper builds on previous work to provide a detailed typology of irrigation systems as currently used in Ghana.

Trees and water: smallholder agroforestry on irrigated lands in Northern India

Trees and water: smallholder agroforestry on irrigated lands in Northern India
Title Trees and water: smallholder agroforestry on irrigated lands in Northern India PDF eBook
Author Zomer, Robert J., Bossio, Deborah A., Trabucco, Antonio, Yuanjie, Li, Gupta, Diwan C., Singh, Virendra P.
Publisher IWMI
Pages 50
Release 2007
Genre Agroforestry
ISBN 9290906855

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Trees are increasingly grown on-farm to supply wood and biomass needs within developing countries. Over the last several decades, within the irrigated rice-wheat growing lands of northern India, fast-growing poplar trees have been planted on tens of thousands of small farms. Recent debate regarding afforestation has raised the issue that water use is often increased when trees are planted. This ongoing debate focuses primarily on afforestation or reforestation of upland and rain-fed agricultural areas, and off-site impacts such as reduced streamflow. Adoption of poplar agroforestry in northern India, in contrast, is occurring in areas where land and water are already intensively used and managed for agricultural production. This study based on farmer survey data, used remote sensing and spatial hydrological modeling to investigate the importance and role of the poplar trees within the agricultural landscape, and to estimate their water use. Overall, results illustrate a potential for addressing the increasing global demand for wood products with trees grown on-farm within irrigated agroforestry systems.

Sustainable Groundwater Development for Improved Livelihoods in Sub-Saharan Africa

Sustainable Groundwater Development for Improved Livelihoods in Sub-Saharan Africa
Title Sustainable Groundwater Development for Improved Livelihoods in Sub-Saharan Africa PDF eBook
Author Paul Pavelic
Publisher Taylor & Francis
Pages 237
Release 2023-05-08
Genre Nature
ISBN 1000866440

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This book provides a comprehensive analysis of the benefits and challenges of intensifying groundwater irrigation in Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) for improving smallholder agrarian livelihoods. Only about 3% of the groundwater resources of Sub-Saharan Africa are used for irrigated agriculture despite the subcontinent’s relative abundance of groundwater. The majority of the region’s smallholders are highly dependent on seasonal dryland cropping, making them extremely vulnerable to uncertain weather patterns and droughts. Improved irrigation capabilities through sustainable groundwater development could unleash smallholder farming and make it a major driver of economic growth, poverty reduction, climate resilience, and improved food security. So, why is groundwater so underused? Tapping into groundwater requires a major shift in farming practices and it has its own challenges and requirements – smallholder access to land and finance for irrigation infrastructure and equipment, gendered and equitable adoption options. This whole list is framed in terms of what the smallholder farmers need. Hence, this should also be put in this context, supply chains, energy access, resource availability, and institutional support. The chapters in this book present a picture that is not only heterogeneous across the region, but also hold some common denominators. They serve to enrich the discourse and help better understand the barriers along the pathways toward the sustainable and transformative adoption of groundwater irrigation. The scientific information provided herein would be of interest to researchers, practitioners, decision makers and planners with interest in the region. This book was originally published as a Special Issue of Water International journal.