The Livelihoods Impacts of Irrigation in Western Africa: The Ghana Experience
Although agriculture remains the mainstay of the African economy, it is currently going through stress because of a multitude of factors including climate change. Thus, many countries in their efforts to transform their agricultural sectors are employing climate-smart initiatives including the provi...
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doaj-17dbfe36dcec4bae94f41fc21c92a7e22021-06-01T00:25:55ZengMDPI AGSustainability2071-10502021-05-01135677567710.3390/su13105677The Livelihoods Impacts of Irrigation in Western Africa: The Ghana ExperienceMamudu Abunga Akudugu0Katherine Kaunza-Nu-Dem Millar1Margaret Atosina Akuriba2Institute for Interdisciplinary Research, University for Development Studies, Tamale TL1350, GhanaInstitute for Interdisciplinary Research, University for Development Studies, Tamale TL1350, GhanaDepartment of Agribusiness Management and Finance, Faculty of Agribusiness and Applied Economics, University for Development Studies, Tamale TL1882, GhanaAlthough agriculture remains the mainstay of the African economy, it is currently going through stress because of a multitude of factors including climate change. Thus, many countries in their efforts to transform their agricultural sectors are employing climate-smart initiatives including the provision of water harvesting technologies for irrigated crop production during the dry season. This paper examines the role of irrigation in the drive towards a transformation of smallholder agriculture in Africa. Focus group discussions, key informant interviews and individual questionnaires were employed for the data collection. The data were analyzed using the regression adjustment (RA) technique. The results indicate that irrigation has significant and positive impacts on farm incomes, employment, consumption, food security and non-farm businesses, all of which are necessary conditions for a successful transformation of smallholder agriculture in Africa. The impacts of irrigation on health and environmental sustainability are mixed—the positive being the ability of irrigators to pay for improved healthcare for their families and the negatives include the outbreak of waterborne diseases associated with irrigation water. Construction of irrigation facilities causes destruction to the environment but improves provisioning ecosystem services. It is generally concluded that access to irrigation is associated with higher farm incomes, employment, consumption, food security and engagement in non-farm business activities. The key policy implication of these findings is that African governments must formulate strategic policies that will accelerate investments in the provision of irrigation facilities to better promote the agenda to transform smallholder agriculture in the continent.https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/13/10/5677AfricaGhanairrigationlivelihoodssmallholder |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Mamudu Abunga Akudugu Katherine Kaunza-Nu-Dem Millar Margaret Atosina Akuriba |
spellingShingle |
Mamudu Abunga Akudugu Katherine Kaunza-Nu-Dem Millar Margaret Atosina Akuriba The Livelihoods Impacts of Irrigation in Western Africa: The Ghana Experience Sustainability Africa Ghana irrigation livelihoods smallholder |
author_facet |
Mamudu Abunga Akudugu Katherine Kaunza-Nu-Dem Millar Margaret Atosina Akuriba |
author_sort |
Mamudu Abunga Akudugu |
title |
The Livelihoods Impacts of Irrigation in Western Africa: The Ghana Experience |
title_short |
The Livelihoods Impacts of Irrigation in Western Africa: The Ghana Experience |
title_full |
The Livelihoods Impacts of Irrigation in Western Africa: The Ghana Experience |
title_fullStr |
The Livelihoods Impacts of Irrigation in Western Africa: The Ghana Experience |
title_full_unstemmed |
The Livelihoods Impacts of Irrigation in Western Africa: The Ghana Experience |
title_sort |
livelihoods impacts of irrigation in western africa: the ghana experience |
publisher |
MDPI AG |
series |
Sustainability |
issn |
2071-1050 |
publishDate |
2021-05-01 |
description |
Although agriculture remains the mainstay of the African economy, it is currently going through stress because of a multitude of factors including climate change. Thus, many countries in their efforts to transform their agricultural sectors are employing climate-smart initiatives including the provision of water harvesting technologies for irrigated crop production during the dry season. This paper examines the role of irrigation in the drive towards a transformation of smallholder agriculture in Africa. Focus group discussions, key informant interviews and individual questionnaires were employed for the data collection. The data were analyzed using the regression adjustment (RA) technique. The results indicate that irrigation has significant and positive impacts on farm incomes, employment, consumption, food security and non-farm businesses, all of which are necessary conditions for a successful transformation of smallholder agriculture in Africa. The impacts of irrigation on health and environmental sustainability are mixed—the positive being the ability of irrigators to pay for improved healthcare for their families and the negatives include the outbreak of waterborne diseases associated with irrigation water. Construction of irrigation facilities causes destruction to the environment but improves provisioning ecosystem services. It is generally concluded that access to irrigation is associated with higher farm incomes, employment, consumption, food security and engagement in non-farm business activities. The key policy implication of these findings is that African governments must formulate strategic policies that will accelerate investments in the provision of irrigation facilities to better promote the agenda to transform smallholder agriculture in the continent. |
topic |
Africa Ghana irrigation livelihoods smallholder |
url |
https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/13/10/5677 |
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