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Food Insecurity & Hydroclimate in Greater Horn of Africa - Potential for Agriculture Amidst Extremes (Paperback, 1st ed. 2022)
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Food Insecurity & Hydroclimate in Greater Horn of Africa - Potential for Agriculture Amidst Extremes (Paperback, 1st ed. 2022)
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This book will benefit users in food security, agriculture, water
management, and environmental sectors. It provides the first
comprehensive analysis of Greater Horn of Africa (GHA)’s food
insecurity and hydroclimate using the
state-of-the-art Gravity Recovery and Climate
Experiment (GRACE) and its Follow-on (GRACE-FO)’s,
centennial precipitation, hydrological models’ and reanalysis’
products. It is here opined that GHA is endowed with freshwater
(surface and groundwater) being home to the world's second largest
freshwater body (Lake Victoria) and the greatest continental water
towers (Ethiopian Highlands) that if properly tapped in a
sustainable way, will support its irrigated agriculture as well as
pastoralism. First, however, the obsolete Nile treaties that hamper
the use of Lake Victoria (White Nile) and Ethiopian Highland (Blue
Nile) have to be unlocked. Moreover, GHA is bedevilled by poor
governance and the ``donor-assistance” syndrome; and in 2020-2021
faced the so-called ``triple threats’’ of desert locust
infestation, climate
variability/change impacts and COVID-19
pandemic. Besides, climate extremes influence its meagre
waters leading to perennial food insecurity. Coupled with frequent
regional and local conflicts, high population growth rate, low crop
yield, invasion of migratory pests, contagious human and livestock
diseases (such as HIV/AIDs, COVID-19 & Rift Valley
fever)Â and poverty, life for more than 310 million of its
inhabitants simply becomes unbearable. Alarming also is the fact
that drought-like humanitarian crises are increasing in GHA despite
recent progress in its monitoring and prediction efforts.
Notwithstanding these efforts, there remain challenges stemming
from uncertainty in its prediction, and the inflexibility and
limited buffering capacity of the recurrent impacted systems. To
achieve greater food security, therefore, in addition to boosting
GHA's agricultural output, UN Office for the Coordination of
Humanitarian Affairs suggest that its “inhabitants must create
more diverse and stable means of livelihood to insulate themselves
and their households from external shocks”. This is a task that
they acknowledge will not be easy as the path ahead is “strewn
with obstacles namely; natural hazards and armed
conflicts”. Understanding GHA’s food insecurity and its
hydroclimate as presented in this book is a good starting point
towards managing the impacts of the natural hazards on the one hand
while understanding the impacts associated with extreme climate on
GHA's available water and assessing the potential of its surface
and groundwater to support its irrigated agriculture and
pastoralism would be the first step towards “coping with
drought” on the other hand. The book represents a significant
effort by Prof Awange in trying to offer a comprehensive overview
of the hydroclimate in the Greater Horn of Africa (GHA). Prof
Eric F. Wood, NAE (USA); FRSC (Canada); Foreign member, ATSE
(Australia).
General
Imprint: |
Springer Nature Switzerland AG
|
Country of origin: |
Switzerland |
Release date: |
2023 |
First published: |
2022 |
Authors: |
Joseph Awange
|
Dimensions: |
235 x 155mm (L x W) |
Format: |
Paperback
|
Pages: |
425 |
Edition: |
1st ed. 2022 |
ISBN-13: |
978-3-03-091004-4 |
Categories: |
Books
Promotions
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LSN: |
3-03-091004-0 |
Barcode: |
9783030910044 |
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