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Irrigation

Africa is an agricultural continent, but its agricultural productivity is the lowest in the world. An aggressive expansion of irrigated area could greatly improve productivity and offset the adverse impact of climate change on food security.

The 5 percent of Africa’s cultivated land that is irrigated accounts for almost a quarter of agricultural production. An additional 1.4 million hectares could be opened to irrigation using water from existing or planned dams at a cost of just $0.3 billion a year. Beyond that, 5.4 million hectares could be opened to small-scale irrigation at an annual cost of $1.8 billion. But in many areas, irrigation is viable only if costs are kept down (an argument for the use of low-cost technologies) or if high-value crops are grown.


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Related Documents

Background Paper

Flagship Report Chapter- Irrigation: Tapping Potential

[download, 338.58 KB]
Background Paper

Irrigation Investment Needs in Sub-Saharan Africa: A Matter of Scale

Irrigation could boost agricultural yields in water-rich Africa by 50 percent, but it now covers just 5 percent of cultivated land. This report identifies the locations that could benefit most from irrigation and the technologies best suited to them.
[download, 116.06 KB]
Background Paper

Watermarks: Indicators of Irrigation Sector Performance in Sub-Saharan Africa

Author/s: Mark Svendsen, Mandy Ewing, and Siwa Msangi
Irrigation is rare in Africa except in a few countries, even it has the power to raise agricultural productivity. Larger investments in irrigation would improve food security and permit greater production of export-quality agricultural goods.
[download, 153.53 KB]
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Key Messages

  • Africa’s agricultural productivity is the lowest in the world—in part because of the underuse of irrigation
  • Africa has significant potential to develop both large- and small-scale irrigation, though economic viability depends on keeping costs down
  • An aggressive campaign of agricultural water development could parry the effects of global warming on food security
  • The performance and sustainability of new irrigation investments will depend on countries’ capacity to address institutional and strategic challenges
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