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March 21, 2010
Getting Water to Crops
By Border Jumpers
Access to water is a luxury that many rural households, particularly in sub-Saharan Africa, do not have. Farmers must often travel long distances to collect water from streams or public wells, making it impossible to irrigate crops or have enough water for cooking and bathing.
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Cross posted from Border Jumpers, Danielle Nierenberg and Bernard Pollack.In 1999, when he purchased his first treadle pump, Robert Mwanza,
a farmer in Lusaka, Zambia, was struggling to make ends meet and
without reliable access to water. As his country dealt with drought
and economic weakness, Robert lacked the necessary resources to
irrigate his farm and "couldn't grow enough to eat, let alone sell."
Access
to water is a luxury that many rural households, particularly in
sub-Saharan Africa, do not have. Farmers must often travel long
distances to collect water from streams or public wells, making it
impossible to irrigate crops or have enough water for cooking and
bathing.
But affordable technologies such as the treadle pump (a foot-powered pump that sits on top of a well and irrigates small plots of land), the rope pump (a manually powered alternative to the treadle pump), and a variety of water storage systems
(made of plastic and used as sources for sprinkler or drip irrigation
systems) are changing all of that. The systems are developed and
supported by International Development Enterprises (IDE),
an organization working to improve the livelihoods of farmers in 13
countries in Asia and Africa through improved agriculture technology
and market access. (See also: Harnessing Too Much of a Good Thing, Addressing Soil Erosion to Improve Production, Income, and Nutrition, and Persistently Innovative: One Farmer Teaches by Example.)
IDE
is making irrigation more efficient by combining technology specially
designed to address the needs of small-scale farmers with
on-the-ground support staff to provide training and education. This
allows farmers to expand their farms, feed their families, and earn a
profit from selling surplus crops.
After just two years of
improved irrigation provided by a treadle pump, Robert Mwanza grew
more than enough vegetables to feed his wife and eight children. He
also earned enough money to purchase an additional pump, doubling the
amount of land he could irrigate. He recruited his brother, Andrew
Mwanza, to work the additional pump, and in three years, with the help
of IDE field staff, Robert began to sell his produce to Agriflora, a
company that exports high-quality vegetables to Europe. Now the two
brothers are growing enough vegetables to afford a motorized petrol
pump for $750, further reducing the labor required to increase
production.
To read more about the importance of getting water
to crops, as well as other examples of innovations that help farmers
do this, see: Water Harvesting, Weathering the Famine, and Persistently Innovative: One Farmer Teaches by Example.
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