WaPOR, remote sensing for water productivity

 

   Ethiopia

Latest news related to Ethiopia
20/10/2023

The WaPOR Ethiopia team, in collaboration with FAO and IWMI, is currently exploring the potential applications of WaPOR in partnership with the private sector. Private sector engagement is considered a vital component of the strategic plans and activities of various ministries and agencies. Th...

28/08/2023

The development of the Wheat Water Productivity tool has been progressing smoothly. The development process began with stakeholder mapping, following a series of individual and group meetings with three key stakeholders: the Ministry of Agriculture, the Agricultural Transformation Institute, a...

15/02/2023
From 16 January to 18 January 2023 a three day training was carried in the city of Adama. The key objectives of the training were to familiarize trainees with WaPOR...
19/07/2022
Ethiopia is the 8th country to host an inception workshop marking the official launch of the new phase of the WaPOR project in the country. This workshop targeted newly appointed...
 

 

About Ethiopia

Located in the Horn of Africa, Ethiopia has an area of 1.1 million square kilometres and a population of about 11.5 million. It has an annual internal renewable surface water flow of about 122 billion cubic metres. However, the exact amount of water withdrawn for various purposes is still not known, so a better understanding of the country's water flows into the economy is needed.

Agriculture in Ethiopia is predominantly rainfed and is being acutely affected by climate change and is unable to meet the increasing demand for food for the ever-growing population, as well as the supply of raw materials for the expanding agro-processing industry. Ethiopia has an irrigation potential of about 11.1 million hectares of land, but only about 15-20 per cent of this is predominantly developed with surface irrigation systems. Irrigation performance, especially water productivity (WP), has not been assessed in the country, but some studies suggest that it is very low. The main challenge is that there is a lack of informed decision-making, planning and management of irrigation systems, and irrigation is managed with already established management practises, resulting in low water productivity, water wastage and land degradation/salinization as well as social conflicts.


Project milestones:

July 2022: WaPOR phase 2 inception workshop
February 2022: WaPOR introductory training

Pilot areas are yet to be identified.

 
 
WaPOR partnerships in Ethiopia
The implementation of WaPOR Phase 2 is supported by a Technical Advisor Group (TAG). Its members include Ministry of Irrigation and Lowlands (MILLs), Ministry of Agriculture (MoA), Ministry of Water and Energy (MoWE), Ethiopian Institute of Agricultural Research (EIAR), the Ethiopian Construction Design and Supervision Works Corporation (ECDSWC) and the Addis Ababa Institute of Technology (AAIT).
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© FAO/Petterik Wiggers