4/3/2005
Nile River Basin Countries To Benefit From New Water Management
Plan
The 10 countries within the Nile River basin will benefit from
better access to information on the availability, use and development
potential of the Nile resources they share under a new project
to improve water management in the region, the United Nations
Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) announced this week.
“The Nile waters bear tremendous potential as a lever
for social and economic development, but at the moment, the inability
to jointly plan water development, reach agreement on equitable
sharing of benefits and attract investment has delayed the use
of this resource for the benefit of the people living in the
Nile basin region,” FAO’s Chief of Water Resources,
Development and Management Service Pasquale Steduto said.
With an average per capita gross
domestic product of $400, far below the African average, the
10 countries – Burundi,
the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), Egypt, Eritrea, Ethiopia,
Kenya, Rwanda, Sudan, Tanzania and Uganda – can ill afford
further delays in making the most of the important resource of
the world’s longest river.
The $5 million project, funded by the Government of Italy and
with FAO assistance, will support basin-wide initiatives to integrate
technical data with demographic, socio-economic and environmental
information to examine how specific policies and projected water
use patterns will affect water resources.
It will develop surveys and case studies on the links between
water management practices and rural livelihoods and food insecurity.
Within this context, a basin-wide survey will be conducted to
assess current and potential water use and water productivity
in rain-fed and irrigated agriculture. A further case study concerns
the analysis and improvement of water productivity through crop
management.
The project will be carried out under the umbrella of the Nile
Basin Initiative, a regional partnership launched by Nile riparian
states in 1999 to facilitate the common pursuit of sustainable
development and management of the Nile basin, an area of some
3.1 million square kilometres, around 10 per cent of the African
continent.
Earlier work has already produced tangible results, including
the establishment of a trans-boundary hydro-meteorological monitoring
network and national databases containing hydro-meteorological
and water use data, as well as information on land use, land
cover and soil type.