Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Water and Climate Change in Africa Raffaello Cervigni The World Bank Key Messages 1. The present: water management is a major constraint to Africa’s development 2. The future: climate change will make those constraint even more severe 3. The opportunity: climate change will increase the urgency of reforms and investments that would be important anyway 4. The challenge: we need both more knowledge, and more resources The present Challenging natural conditions High variability and low quantities for much of the continent Median rainfall and standard deviation USA - SSA 1200 Risk of recurrent drought standard deviation 1000 SSA USA 800 600 400 200 0 0 20 40 60 m edian rainfall % 80 100 Frequent extreme weather events Hydrological variability has huge impacts on poverty & livelihoods Relationship holds even in diverse middle income economies with substantial water storage infrastructure e.g. Morocco Inability to smooth water availability has multi-sectoral implications • Under present conditions (water storage, agricultural development, transport infrastructure etc), hydrologic variability reduces potential economic growth in Ethiopia by 38% and increases poverty by 25% • A single drought over a 12-year period will decrease average GDP growth rates by 7-10% Countries across continent already facing different kinds of water crisis Under-use in SSA, limited margins in North Africa Proportion of Total Freshwater Resources Stored in Reservoirs 90 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 W .E ur op e Au s/ NZ a Am er ic SS A No rth SA S NA M LA C EC A EA P 0 142 Tanzania 370 Burkina Faso 800 788 900 South Africa 500 492 600 Morocco 363 300 Namibia 307 400 Nigeria 139 0 Algeria 114 200 Kenya 47 11 100 Ethiopia Lesotho storage / capita Water storage south of the Sahara is woefully under-developed 700 Water management in Africa is particularly challenging, because international river basins are predominant The future What is expected to change? • Temperature: – Expected to increase 2°- 6°C (over next century) with greatest impact over the semiarid margins of the Sahara and central southern Africa and least in equatorial latitudes and coastal environments. • Precipitation: – Projected future changes in mean seasonal rainfall in Africa are less well defined. Severe, but diverse impacts Percent change in run-off: multi-model average for the winter and summer precipitation (A1B SRES scenario) Reduction of 20 to 30% by 2050 Source: Milly et al (2005), published in Nature Increase of 20 to 30% by 2050 In water-scarce countries, agriculture will change • Rain-fed agriculture will become less reliable • Water allocations to agriculture will fall significantly – Urban use will take priority and urban populations growing • New irrigation schemes will have to be designed for lower water availability • Less surface water will encourage users to use groundwater • Controlling this is a highly complex institutional challenge • Reduced water availability in agriculture increases dependence on trade (high value crops for export, import of staples) The opportunity When countries can smooth consumption, agriculture becomes much more stable 40 Agriculture, value added (Annual % growth) Ethiopia Egypt 30 Sudan 20 10 0 1982 1984 1986 1988 1990 1992 -10 -20 -30 Year 1994 1996 1998 2000 2002 Actions needed will become all the more important • Improved monitoring, assessment of water balance • Improved planning and allocation processes, including internationally • Strengthening institutions to manage water • Investments There will be no substitute for reform • It will become all the more important to review – Policies that promote activities that are particularly vulnerable to precipitation • E.g. subsidies for rainfed wheat production in North Africa – Plans for new infrastructure where institutions are not yet ready to generate the potential benefits The challenge Improving knowledge for better planning Change in rainfall (m m /year) ECHAM4 2040-2069 HADCM2 2040-2069 CSIRO 2040-2069 NCAR 2010-2049 CCSR 2040-2069 200 100 0 -100 -200 CGCM1 2040-2069 GFDL 2010-2049 Mobilizing resources for storage management Years needed at 10% current GDP investment per year to reach South Africa Standard Ethiopia Ghana Tanzania Uganda Lesotho Senegal Nigeria Kenya Burkina Faso Namibia Algeria Morocco 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 Climate change can be an opportunity • The door may be opening, provided . . . . • Political attention internationally • Consensus at national and local level