Supporting Farmer-Led Irrigation in Mozambique: Reflections on Field-Testing a New Design Approach

Smallholder irrigation technologies introduced in sub-Saharan Africa are often unsustainable in the sense that they are not maintained by their users. In contrast, there is clear evidence that smallholder farmers have been developing and expanding irrigated areas. An approach was developed that take...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Wouter Beekman, Gert Jan Veldwisch
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2016-06-01
Series:Sustainability
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/8/6/580
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spelling doaj-e2d0aaccd5c54faa8d0f460318adb6722020-11-24T22:57:11ZengMDPI AGSustainability2071-10502016-06-018658010.3390/su8060580su8060580Supporting Farmer-Led Irrigation in Mozambique: Reflections on Field-Testing a New Design ApproachWouter Beekman0Gert Jan Veldwisch1Resilience BV, Tweede Kostverlorenkade 138-2, 1053 SE Amsterdam, The NetherlandsWater Resources Management Group, Wageningen University, Droevendaalsesteeg 3a, 6708 PB Wageningen, The NetherlandsSmallholder irrigation technologies introduced in sub-Saharan Africa are often unsustainable in the sense that they are not maintained by their users. In contrast, there is clear evidence that smallholder farmers have been developing and expanding irrigated areas. An approach was developed that takes these farmers’ initiatives as a starting point to stimulate further irrigated agricultural expansion in central Mozambique, dubbed the PIAD approach (Participatory Irrigated Agricultural Development). The approach was documented through field diaries, participatory monitoring and evaluation. This article presents an analysis and reflection on the design process. Amongst other things, it shows that a crucial difference is the division of roles between users, contractors and irrigation engineers, both in terms of division of responsibilities and in understanding the interdisciplinary connections of irrigated agricultural production. The approach allowed users to be kept in the driver’s seat of development while going beyond improving irrigation infrastructure, including agronomic and institutional interventions. Additionally, the results show that technologies are being sustained by their users and copied by farmers in neighboring areas. We conclude that the approach allows for active investment by the users, both in design as well as in project costs and labor, which later results in the improvements being maintained and copied, a clear marker of sustainability.http://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/8/6/580farmer-led irrigationdevelopmentdesign approachsustainabilityCentral Mozambique
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Wouter Beekman
Gert Jan Veldwisch
spellingShingle Wouter Beekman
Gert Jan Veldwisch
Supporting Farmer-Led Irrigation in Mozambique: Reflections on Field-Testing a New Design Approach
Sustainability
farmer-led irrigation
development
design approach
sustainability
Central Mozambique
author_facet Wouter Beekman
Gert Jan Veldwisch
author_sort Wouter Beekman
title Supporting Farmer-Led Irrigation in Mozambique: Reflections on Field-Testing a New Design Approach
title_short Supporting Farmer-Led Irrigation in Mozambique: Reflections on Field-Testing a New Design Approach
title_full Supporting Farmer-Led Irrigation in Mozambique: Reflections on Field-Testing a New Design Approach
title_fullStr Supporting Farmer-Led Irrigation in Mozambique: Reflections on Field-Testing a New Design Approach
title_full_unstemmed Supporting Farmer-Led Irrigation in Mozambique: Reflections on Field-Testing a New Design Approach
title_sort supporting farmer-led irrigation in mozambique: reflections on field-testing a new design approach
publisher MDPI AG
series Sustainability
issn 2071-1050
publishDate 2016-06-01
description Smallholder irrigation technologies introduced in sub-Saharan Africa are often unsustainable in the sense that they are not maintained by their users. In contrast, there is clear evidence that smallholder farmers have been developing and expanding irrigated areas. An approach was developed that takes these farmers’ initiatives as a starting point to stimulate further irrigated agricultural expansion in central Mozambique, dubbed the PIAD approach (Participatory Irrigated Agricultural Development). The approach was documented through field diaries, participatory monitoring and evaluation. This article presents an analysis and reflection on the design process. Amongst other things, it shows that a crucial difference is the division of roles between users, contractors and irrigation engineers, both in terms of division of responsibilities and in understanding the interdisciplinary connections of irrigated agricultural production. The approach allowed users to be kept in the driver’s seat of development while going beyond improving irrigation infrastructure, including agronomic and institutional interventions. Additionally, the results show that technologies are being sustained by their users and copied by farmers in neighboring areas. We conclude that the approach allows for active investment by the users, both in design as well as in project costs and labor, which later results in the improvements being maintained and copied, a clear marker of sustainability.
topic farmer-led irrigation
development
design approach
sustainability
Central Mozambique
url http://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/8/6/580
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