• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
Innovation Lab For Small Scale Irrigation

Innovation Lab For Small Scale Irrigation

Innovation Lab For Small Scale Irrigation

  • Home
  • Countries
    • Ethiopia
    • Ghana
    • Mali
    • Tanzania
  • Focus
    • Water Resources and Climate
    • Nutrition
    • Economic Growth
    • Private Sector
    • Gender and Inclusion
    • Capacity and Engagement
  • Publications
    • Research Briefs
    • Papers and Articles
    • ILSSI Presentations
    • Student Thesis Papers
    • Reports on Stakeholder Engagements
    • IDSS Reports
    • ILSSI Annual Reports
    • ILSSI Data Management
  • News
    • Current News
    • Events
  • About
  • Contact Us
  • Show Search
Hide Search

Search Results for: groundwater

Ethiopian cuisine’s star ingredient provides clues on how to farm in a climate-change era

February 3, 2020 by matt.stellbauer

Using conservation agriculture practices can increase food production while safeguarding water and soil on farms and across drier, hotter landscapes.

This post was first published on agrilinks.org.

Farmers in Danghesta village, Amhara region, Ethiopia, rely on solar-powered small scale irrigation and conservation agriculture techniques to grow onions and other vegetables. Photo by Mulugeta Ayene/WLE.
Farmers in Danghesta village, Amhara region, Ethiopia, rely on solar-powered small scale irrigation and conservation agriculture techniques to grow onions and other vegetables. Photo by Mulugeta Ayene/WLE.

In Ethiopian cuisine, onion rules. Stews, sauces, and salads all rely on onions as a star ingredient, and market stalls are stacked high with fragrant bulbs. Across the country, onions contribute significantly to food security, adding taste and nutrients to diets otherwise mainly made up of cereals.

Despite their popularity, onion crops yield much less in Ethiopia than in other African countries. Farmers here, like elsewhere, use irrigation to cultivate onions. In fact, farmers prefer to irrigate onion more than other crops, thanks to the high demand and high prices for onions. But yields remain low.

Finding out how to increase the yield and quality of onion and other irrigated crops — such as cabbage, tomatoes, and potatoes — is an urgent priority amid a rise in droughts and dry spells. In the past, most Ethiopian farmers have relied on rain to water their crops, but because rainfall has become less reliable, pumping water from shallow groundwater reserves, reservoirs, or streams to water crops is emerging as a necessary alternative.

However, irrigation must be done without reducing water for downstream users or ecosystem services and without causing environmental harm, such as water pollution or excessive soil erosion. Done right, irrigation can enable farmers to grow more nutritious food all year round and provide water for other purposes, such as household and sanitation uses.

To test how to increase onion yield, and at the same time use water and soil most productively, we set up a trial with 34 farmers growing Red Bombay onions in the Dangela administrative district of the Amhara region during the dry season from December 2016 to March 2017. We wanted to find out how using a set of practices known as “conservation agriculture” could improve not only productivity, but also environmental sustainability, incomes, and nutrition.

What is conservation agriculture

On the left, farmers have applied mulch around the onions, one of the conservation agriculture techniques that leads to higher yields and improved water productivity. Photo by Mulugeta Ayene/WLE.
On the left, farmers have applied mulch around the onions, one of the conservation agriculture techniques that leads to higher yields and improved water productivity. Photo by Mulugeta Ayene/WLE.

What we call conservation agriculture is a certain way of farming that is based on three main principles: farmers plough the soil with minimum disturbance, mulch is used to cover the soil between crops, and the kinds of crops grown on a certain plot change every season.

In general, conservation agriculture is expected to increase the yield of vegetable crops. In addition, the practices improve soil quality, including by increasing soil moisture and minimizing the loss of valuable topsoil. Rotating crops between seasons also helps boost soil nutrients. Because moisture is better stored in the soil, the crop’s water use efficiency increases and less irrigation is needed. Finally, because the applied mulch impedes weeds, farmers’ labor burden decreases.

We collaborated with the farmers in the Dangela administrative district of the Amhara region to grow onions using conservation agriculture practices. While we provided seeds, irrigation equipment, and training, the farmers contributed their own land and saw the potential benefits as they emerged. The results were as promising as expected.

A multitude of benefits

Our field data showed that water productivity did indeed improve when farmers started practicing conservation agriculture; they were able to “grow more crop per drop of water”. Also, on average, the new practices increased yields by 35 percent, improved the quality of crops, and boosted farmers’ profitability. 

“The conventional tillage practice needs water every day since the soil dries out quickly, and plants wilt. But plants under conservation agriculture can be irrigated once in two days and do not need lots of work for hoeing and weeding,” said Mr. Girma Yihune, one of the farmers particpating in the trial. “The onion yield, and also the bulb size, is better under conservation agriculture than with conventional tillage. The amount of money made from a small 10 m by 10 m plot was higher than that of rainfed crops like teff and maize. This practice should be promoted to help the community in the area.”

In addition to observing these immediate benefits, we ran a biophysical simulation using our suite of integrated decision support system models to investigate additional effects on water and soil that we could not directly observe.

The results indicated that conservation agriculture also increased soil water availability at the onions’ roots. In cases when the farmers applied excess irrigation water, that water helped to replenish the shallow groundwater aquifer. In addition, the mulch applied by farmers protected the soil from erosion and gradually grew the top layer of organic matter in the soil.

The findings from our study indicate the importance and role of conservation agriculture for sustainable intensification of food production, while maintaining and restoring soil health, using water sustainably, providing weed control, and increasing farmers’ profitability. Conservation agriculture may also reduce greenhouse gas emissions by enabling farmers’ plots to serve as carbon sinks. Furthermore, our modeling indicated that farmers’ increased profit can be used to purchase supplemental foods, mainly animal products such as eggs, meat, and milk products, thus improving the nutritional security of their households.

From farm plots to larger landscapes

The benefits of conservation agriculture are evident and well demonstrated at the field level. What’s more, these benefits can potentially accumulate and expand to the watershed or basin scale. These practices have the potential to both contribute to soil and water conservation and to strengthen the socio-economic well-being of the entire Amhara region and across the Ethiopian Highlands.

Particularly during a time of climate variability and change, conservation agriculture can play an important role in supporting communities who are facing negative effects, such as less rain, higher temperature, and more pests, which are impeding their food production. In this context, conservation agriculture practices in combination with small scale irrigation can offer farmers a viable option for greater, better, and more sustainable production.

To reach the full potential of conservation agriculture in Ethiopia, a shift in mindsets and practices is needed. Encouraging farmers, for example, through stronger extension programs that showcase the benefits of conservation agriculture and explain how to put it into practice is a first step. Continuing collaboration between scientists and farmers can help shed light on what incentives can drive greater adoption of conservation agriculture, eventually informing enabling policies and programs. Working together to explore and fulfill the promises of conservation agriculture, we can enable sustainable food production, not only for individuals farmers, but across entire landscapes.

This post is written by Abeyou W. Worqlul, Manoj K Jha, and Yihun Dile, Feed the Future Innovation Lab for Small Scale Irrigation

Student interview: Raising the alarm on farming-related water pollution in the Ethiopian Highlands

December 10, 2019 by matt.stellbauer

In 2017-2018, Feleke Kuraz Sishu joined ILSSI’s capacity development program for graduate students, and he investigated the impacts of agricultural intensification on surface and groundwater in the Ethiopian Highlands. He is a student at the Bahir Dar Institute of Technology, Bahir Dar University, Ethiopia, and he is currently at the university in Calgary, British Columbia, for a three-month study experience.

Feleke Kuraz Sishu conducted fieldwork in the Robit and Dangila watersheds in the Ethiopian Highlands between 2017 and 2018. Photo: Feleke Kuraz Sishu/Bahir Dar University.
Feleke Kuraz Sishu conducted fieldwork in the Robit and Dangila watersheds in the Ethiopian Highlands between 2017 and 2018. Photo: Feleke Kuraz Sishu/Bahir Dar University.

What were you studying while you were working with ILSSI?

I studied how agricultural intensification impacts nutrient and pesticide fluxes in streams and shallow groundwater systems in the Ethiopian Highlands. I monitored two agricultural watersheds, Robit and Dangila, between 2017 and 2018. We sampled water from streams during storms and dry periods, and we collected groundwater samples from more than 30 wells located either in rainfed or irrigated fields. Then we analyzed the level of agro-chemicals in the water.

Feleke Kuraz Sishu is a student at Bahir Dar University, Ethiopia.
Feleke Kuraz Sishu is a student at Bahir Dar University, Ethiopia.

What’s the most surprising thing you found?

We found nitrate in the shallow groundwater samples, with a higher concentration in samples taken on upper and mid-level slopes, than in those taken at the bottom of slopes. Having a high concentration of nitrate in groundwater poses a risk to human health, especially if the water is used for drinking.

The presence of nitrate can be explained by different things: first, farmers are beginning to fertilize their rainfed and irrigated fields on the upper and mid-level slopes, meaning that they add nitrogen, which is a critical plant nutrient. However, when crops are not able to use up all the nitrogen, it leaches into the groundwater and causes high concentrations of nitrate. We discovered that in some areas, the level of nitrate exceeded the permissible 10mg/l limit for drinking water. It is likely that intensified farming and fertilizer application are among the causes for high levels of nitrate in the groundwater.

When we looked at streams, we found both nitrate and dissolved phosphorus, which is another common component of fertilizer. In both watersheds, the level of nitrate and phosphorus in streams exceeded the threshold limit more than fivefold. When the streams empty out into Lake Tana, which is the largest freshwater body in Ethiopia, the result is an explosive growth of algae and other plants. This threatens the lake’s ability to provide water, fish and other benefits.

Our results indicate that degraded landscapes with poor watershed management activities, combined with high rainfall during the rainfed farming season, contributed to nitrogen leaching and likely caused the increased levels of nitrate and dissolved phosphorus.

Finally, we also detected pesticides used by farmers in streams and shallow wells. The concentration exceeded the threshold limits set by the World Health Organization of 0.1 μg/l for each kind of pesticide and 0.5 μg/l in total.

Installing water sampling instruments over a stream. Photo: Feleke Kuraz Sishu/Bahir Dar University.
Installing water sampling instruments over a stream. Photo: Feleke Kuraz Sishu/Bahir Dar University.

What changes do you hope your work will help achieve?

Our findings from these two watersheds point to poor watershed management, intensive farming and the threat from increasing use of fertilizer in the uplands. Based on our observations of Lake Tana, which is suffering from a water hyacinth invasion brought on by the excessive nutrients delivered by streams, these issues exist across the northern Ethiopian Highlands.

The health and environmental risks stemming from these issues should be a major cause of alarm, and therefore we have worked to raise these issues and share recommendations with government officers, non-government actors, community watershed managers and communities themselves in the area.

For example, we have informed these stakeholders about which wells hold groundwater that is so polluted by nitrate that it should not be used for drinking. We have also started discussions about what changes communities can make to limit pesticide use, and we have raised the issue at the policy level, since Ethiopia currently has no regulations on pesticides for agricultural use.

We hope that our recommendations and engagement with stakeholders will lead to changes that can safeguard the clean water supply and support environmentally sustainable agricultural intensification.

What do you think is the biggest challenge for scaling farmer-led irrigation?

From a water quality perspective, the fact that both surface and groundwater is so vulnerable to contamination from pesticide and fertilizer use is the biggest challenge. That’s one reason we need to identify areas that are suitable for irrigation – and thus agricultural intensification – but at the same time less vulnerable to pollution from agro-chemicals. This is a pressing challenge for local farmers, and therefore an opportunity to collaborate with them on research for development activities.

What is your advice to other students looking to work with Feed the Future innovation labs?

I am very thankful to ILSSI for funding and providing all requested facilities during my research. I got an opportunity to work with students from different countries, with researchers and with different institutions – this helped me gain skills, share experiences and develop future collaborations. Therefore, I would like to advice the students interested in working with ILSSI that it is a great chance to conduct research and network with scholars from around the world. Thank you!


On an ongoing basis, ILSSI supports a number of graduate and honor’s undergraduate students from academic institutions in Ethiopia, Ghana and Tanzania. We pair them with experienced scientists from our partner organizations, who mentor the students through proposal, research design, field work, data collection, analysis and presentation of results. These capacity development efforts underpin the long-term scaling and sustainability of small scale irrigation in sub-Saharan Africa. In this case, Feleke Kuraz Sishu’s work was co-supported by the Feed the Future Sustainable Intensification Lab.

IDSS Reports

  • Report on Integrated Decision Support System (IDSS) Local Capacity Development Trainings in Ethiopia, Rwanda, USA, and Ghana (Spring 2023)
  • Report on IDSS Local Capacity Development Trainings in Cote d’lvoire and Ghana (Spring 2022)
  • Report on IDSS local capacity development at Africa Center of Excellence for Climate Smart Agriculture and Biodiversity Conservation (ACE Climate SABC) of Haramaya University (2021)
  • Report on the IDSS Training of the Agricultural Transformation Agency (2017)
  • Household Food Security and Nutrition Analysis Using a Farm Simulation Model (2017)
  • Profitability and Economic Feasibility Analysis of Small Scale Irrigation Technologies in Zanlerigu and Bihinaayili, Northern Ghana (2016)
  • Upscaling analysis – from small river basin to country (2016)
  • Scale up of biophysical and environmental analysis of proposed SSI interventions – summary of aims, timeline, methodology and progress (2016)
  • Assessing Potential land Suitability for Surface Irrigation using Groundwater in Ethiopia (2016)
  • Assessing Irrigation Potential and Land Suitability in Ethiopia (2016)
  • Report on Ethiopia IDSS workshops (2016)
  • Report on Ghana IDSS workshops (2016)
  • Report on Tanzania IDSS workshops (2016)
  • Summary report on IDSS training workshopss (2016)
  • Partners Workshop Report and Plan for Year 3, Addis Ababa, August 20-21, 2015
  • An Example of gaps and constraints analysis for small scale irrigation systems in the Robit Watershed (2015)
  • Small-Scale Irrigation Applications for Smallholder Farmers in Ethiopia Ex Ante Analysis of Options (2015)
  • A socio -hydrological approach for incorporating gender into biophysical models and implications for water resource research (2015)
  • Ex Ante Analysis of Small-Scale Irrigation Interventions: Robit (2014)
  • Ex Ante Analysis of Small-Scale Irrigation Interventions: Dangila (2014)
  • Ex Ante Analysis of Small-Scale Irrigation Interventions: Adami Tulu (2014)
  • Ex Ante Analysis of Small-Scale Irrigation Interventions: Lemo (2014)
  • Ex Ante Analysis of Small-Scale Irrigation Interventions in Dembiya (2014)
  • Small-Scale Irrigation Applications for Smallholder Farmers in Ghana Ex Ante Analysis of Options (2014)
  • Ex Ante Analysis of Small -Scale Irrigation Interventions: Bihinaayili (2014)
  • Ex Ante Analysis of Small -Scale Irrigation Interventions: Nimbasinia (2014)
  • Ex Ante Analysis of Small -Scale Irrigation Interventions: Zanlerigu (2014)
  • Small – Scale Irrigation Applications for Smallholder Farmers in Tanzania Ex Ante Analysis of Options (2014)
  • Ex Ante Analysis of Small – Scale Irrigation Interventions: Babati (2014)
  • Ex Ante Analysis of Small – Scale Irrigation Interventions: Kilosa (2014)
  • Ex Ante Analysis of Small – Scale Irrigation Interventions: Mvomero (2014)
  • Experimental Design Ethiopa (2014)
  • Experimental Design Tanzania (2014)
  • Experimental  Design Ghana (2014)
  • Description of  the process of target farmer selection (2014)

Publications

ILSSI and our partners regularly publish articles, reports and success stories to document and share our work on expanding small scale, famer-led irrigation in sub-Saharan Africa. Browse highlighted publications below or learn more by exploring publications by type. You can also search our collection of Open Access Publications by subject through the Texas A&M University Libraries.

  • NEW: ILSSI Legacy Report 2013-2023
  • NEW: Solar Powered Irrigation: Lessons on Scaling for Inclusive Access
  • NEW: An Island of Green in Ghana: Smallholder Farmers Adapt to Climate Change with Solar Irrigation
  • NEW: Adapting Asset-Based Finance to Meet the Promise of Inclusivity
  • Farmer-led Irrigation Multi-Stakeholder Dialogues: Value Chain Approaches to Small Scale Irrigation Development
  • Small Scale Irrigation Dialogue Space: Understanding the scalability of solar-powered irrigation in Ghana: market segmentation and mapping pump suitability
  • ILSSI Brief on Gender (2021)
  • Multi-stakeholder dialogues supporting the scaling of inclusive and sustainable agricultural water management in Mali
  • Development of the vegetable seed sector in Mali and opportunities for irrigated Seed production
  • Seed laws and regulations affecting the development of the private vegetable seed sector in Sub-Saharan Africa
  • Solar Photovoltaic Technology for Small-scale Irrigation in Ghana: Suitability Mapping and Business Models
  • ILSSI Brief on private sector engagement (2021)
  • Women and small-scale irrigation: A review of the factors influencing gendered patterns of participation and benefits
  • Preliminary economic impacts assessment of tariff reduction on water lifting technologies in Ethiopia
  • Irrigated fodder in Ethiopia: Suitability and Potential
  • Farmer-Led Irrigation Multi-Stakeholder Dialogues: Financing solutions for scaling sustainable and inclusive farmer-led irrigation in Ethiopia
  • Small scale irrigation dialogue space: Partnerships and financing solutions for sustainable and inclusive farmer-led irrigation scaling in Ghana
  • Innovation Lab for Livestock Systems: Simulated economic and nutrition impacts of irrigated fodder and crossbred cows on households in Lemo woreda of Ethiopia
  • Innovation Lab for Livestock Systems: Identification of areas suited for fodder production in Ethiopia
  • Innovation Lab for Livestock Systems: Estimating water resource availability to produce livestock fodder in the rainfed agricultural land in Ethiopia using small scale irrigation
  • ILSSI Brief on economic growth (2020)
  • ILSSI Brief on nutrition (2020)
  • ILSSI Brief on water resources (2020)
  • Endosulfan pesticide dissipation and residue levels in khat and onion in a sub-humid region of Ethiopia
  • Viewpoint: Water, agriculture & poverty in an era of climate change: Why do we know so little?
  • A multi-stakeholder dialogue on farmer-led irrigation in Ethiopia: Engaging with stakeholders from the Agricultural Water Management Task Force
  • Effect of climate change on land suitability for surface irrigation and irrigation potential of the shallow groundwater in Ghana
  • Statistical bias correction of regional climate model simulations for climate change projection in the Jemma subbasin, upper Blue Nile Basin of Ethiopia
  • Impact of climate change on streamflow hydrology in headwater catchments of the Upper Blue Nile Basin, Ethiopia
  • Observed changes in extremes of daily rainfall and temperature in Jemma subbasin, Upper Blue Nile Basin, Ethiopia
  • Deep Tillage Improves Degraded Soils in the (Sub) Humid Ethiopian Highlands
  • Irrigation and Women’s Diet in Ethiopia
  • Effect of climate change on land suitability for surface irrigation and irrigation potential of the shallow groundwater in Ghana
  • Water Resource Assessment, Gaps and Constraints of Vegetable Production in Robit and Dangishta Watersheds, Upper Blue Nile Basin, Ethiopia
  • Scaling-up Conservation Agriculture Production System (CAPS) with Drip Irrigation by Integrating MCE Technique and the APEX Model

Recent news

Enhancing Groundwater Governance through Experimental Games in Ghana

July 7, 2023

Continue Reading Enhancing Groundwater Governance through Experimental Games in Ghana

ILSSI knowledge sharing workshop in Ethiopia

June 25, 2023

Continue Reading ILSSI knowledge sharing workshop in Ethiopia

Unlocking the potential of irrigation for improved nutrition in Ethiopia

June 24, 2023

Continue Reading Unlocking the potential of irrigation for improved nutrition in Ethiopia

Presentations

2023
  • Promoting Solar Irrigation with shallow groundwater sources among Smallholder Farmers in West Africa (Abena Ofosu, International Water Management Institute)
  • Ensuring the capacity strengthening to sustain water for agriculture and resilience. (Seifu Tilahun, International Water Management Institute)
  • Bundling and catalyzing solar-based technologies and services: Experiences from Ghana, Ethiopia, and Mali (Thai Thi Minh, International Water Management Institute)
  • Accounting for water use in FLID (Mansoor Leh, International Water Management Institute)
  • Multi-stakeholder dialogues: An interactive learning platform for FLID (Abena Ofosu, International Water Management Institute)
  • Agricultural research for development and FLID for all (Thai Thi Minh, International Water Management Institute)
  • Effect of irrigation and fertilizer management on the performance of selected forages (Misba Abdella, Bahir Dar University)
  • ILSSI’s project research processes and progress in Bahir Dar zuria district (Fikadu Tessema, International Livestock Research Institute)
  • Innovation Lab for Small Scale Irrigation (ILSSI): Irrigated fodder research and development achievements (Melkamu Derseh, International Livestock Research Institute)
  • Gender Relations and Women’s Empowerment in Small-scale Irrigated Forage Production in the Amhara and SNNP Regions of Ethiopia (Immaculate Omondi, International Livestock Research Institute)
  • Effects of PW on watershed rehabilitation and irrigation interventions in BHA-supported PSNP areas of Ethiopia (Bedru Balana, International Food Policy Research Institute)
  • Potentials for and benefits from irrigated fodder: highlights from the ILSSI research (Melkamu Derseh, International Livestock Research Institute)
  • Assessment of watershed rehabilitation and irrigation interventions in USAID Productive Safety Net Program (PSNP) watersheds of Ethiopia (Yared Bayissa, Texas A & M University)
  • Ensuring the capacity to sustain water for agriculture and resilience (Tewodros Assefa and Seifu Tilahun, Bahir Dar University)
  • Lessons on partnerships with ILSSI and scaling pathways (Rensys Engineering and Trading PLC)
  • Multistakeholder Dialogues: A Pathway to Unlocking Innovation Scaling and Sustainable Agricultural Transformation (Muluken Elias Adamseged, International Water Management Institute)
  • Market linkage pathway to catalyze smallholder farmers’ investment in irrigation (Dagmawi Melaku Abegaz, International Water Management Institute)
  • Performance of Ethiopia’s duty-exemption policy reform for irrigation pumps and equipment (Zenebe Adimassu, International Water Management Institute)
  • Getting Ahead of the Game: Experiential Learning on Groundwater Governance and Collective Action (Claudia Ringler, International Food Policy Research Institute)
  • Socio-economic effects of PW on watershed rehabilitation and irrigation interventions in BHA-supported PSNP areas of Ethiopia (Bedru Balana, International Food Policy Research Institute)
  • Gender Relations and Women’s Empowerment in Small-Scale Irrigated Forage Production in the Amhara and SNNP Regions of Ethiopia (Esther Njuguna-Mungai, International Livestock Research Institute)
  • Lessons from Engaging with Irrigated Forages Value Chain Actors – Dairy Cooperatives (Aberra Adie, International Livestock Research Institute)
  • 25 May 23 ILSSI Workshop Addis Ababa Posters
  • Co-designing resilient and sustainable climate-smart cocoa through affordable irrigation and financing mechanisms (Cocoa Health and Extension Division, Ghana Cocoa Board)
  • Linking Science to Action – A World Bank/CGIAR Partnership Scaling Innovations in Irrigation (Katie Kennedy Freeman, Sr Ag Economist, Agriculture and Climate Adaptation, World Bank)
  • Small-Scale Irrigation – Income and economic growth opportunities (Bedru Balana, International Food Policy Research Institute)
  • Partnering with private sector to reaching more smallholder farmers: Potential and constraint (Minh Thai, International Water Management Institute)
  • Contributing to agricultural led growth and improved livelihoods through small-scale irrigation (Karin Jeanneret, ENNOS)
  • ILSSI Irrigated fodder research and development: lessonsfrom cooperative based interventions (Melkamu Derseh, International Livestock Research Institute)
  • Suitability, sustainability and resilience: case study from Mali on vegetables and vegetable seed (Fati Aziz, Texas A & M University)
  • Solar Irrigation – Selected Findings from ILSSI (Claudia Ringler and Hua Xie, IFPRI)
  • Scaling irrigation for sustainability and resilience of people and systems amid climate change (Petra Schmitter, International Water Management Institute)
  • Getting Ahead of the Game: Experiential Learning on Groundwater Governance and Collective Action (Hagar ElDidi and Wei Zhang – IFPRI)
  • Small-Scale Irrigation and Nutrition: Lessons from East and West Africa (Elizabeth Bryan, International Food Policy Research Institute)
  • Capacity for sustainable agricultural water use (Nicole Lefore, Texas A & M University)
  • Ensuring the capacity to sustain water for agriculture and resilience (Seifu Tilahun, Bahir Dar University and IWMI)
2022
  • Farmer led irrigation Multi Stakeholder Dialogues: Ethiopia, Inclusive and Sustainable Expansion of Farmer Led Irrigation
  • Solar Powered Irrigation: Achieving Inclusive Access for Women (Cultivating Change)
  • Asset based irrigation finance, constraints and opportunities, Solar Powered Irrigation: Lessons on Scaling for Inclusive Access (ESMAP)
2021
  • Different segments for systems in Ghana: Determining factors and important variables to consider in segmenting cocoa farmers
  • Solar Water Pump use by cocoa farmers: Initial observations
  • Cocoa Health and Extension Division (Ghana Cocoa Board)
  • Irrigation constraints for cocoa production: Producer and market perspective
  • Water Resources Availability and Water Required for Cocoa Production in Ghana
  • Poster: Small-Scale Irrigation (SSI) and Women’s Empowerment (WE): Lessons from Northern Ghana
  • Innovating Asset Finance Inclusion: A gender-sensitive credit assessment inirrigated agricultural value chains (2021 Cultivating Equality Conference)
  • Poster: Yield index insurance and farmers’ resilience in Ethiopia: Analysis using a farm-level integrated simulation approach
  • Development of the vegetable seed sector in Mali and opportunities for irrigated seed production, Dr. Rosaine Yegbemey, World Vegetable Center
  • Supply chain actors and marketing margin of irrigation technologies in Ethiopia, Dr. Fitsum Hagos, International Water Management Institute (IWMI)
  • Does Small-Scale Irrigation Provide a Pathway to Women’s Empowerment? Lessons from Northern Ghana, Elizabeth Bryan, International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI)
  • Impacts of scaling small-scale irrigation on nutrient loading to freshwater ecosystems, Dr. Yihun Dile, Texas A&M Integrated Decision Support Systems
2019
  • Linkages between Smaill-Scale Irrigation and Women’s Empowerment 
  • Innovation Lab for Small Scale Irrigation Seminar in Accra, Ghana 
  • Irrigation and agriculture development in Africa: Impact on water quality and ecosystem health in the Ethiopian highlands
2018
Presentations from the Ethiopia Stakeholder Workshop
  • Overview of the Feed the Future ILSSI – Aims, partners, activities, and impact
  • Impact of SSI: Implications for income, nutrition, health, and women’s empowerment
  • Small Scale irrigation technologies: Farmers willingness to pay
  • Entry points for scaling: Market for irrigated fodder in Ethiopia
  • Entry points for scaling: Microfinance and rural lending, and engaging the private sector in technology supply chains
  • Potential for upscaling small-scale irrigation (IDSS) – constraints and opportunities
Presentations from the Ghana Stakeholder Workshop
  • ILSSI Overview
  • Potential for upscaling small-scale irrigation (IDSS) – constraints and opportunities
  • Entry Points for SSI Scaling: Economic feasibility with scaling through micro and rural finance, and engaging the private sector
  • Enhancing Land and water productivity of small-scale irrigation in Northern Ghana through improved irrigation and water scheduling technologies
  • Farmers experience and success stories
Presentations from the Tanzania Stakeholder Workshop
  • Impact of SSI: Implications for income, nutrition, health, and women’s’ empowerment
  • Potential for upscaling small-scale irrigation (IDSS) – constraints and opportunities
  • Entry points for scaling: Strengthening fodder markets and testing forages under different irrigation technologies in Tanzania
  • Small Scale irrigation technologies: Managing water efficiency and productivity for productivity and profit
  • Small Scale irrigation, conservation agriculture, and homestead gardens
Presentations from the ILSSI International Symposium
  • The Role of water in Global Food Security
  • Agricultural Water Management for Sustainable Intensification of Smallholder Farms
  • Impact of research on Irrigation in Smallholder Farming Systems
  • Integrated modeling and scaling
  • Field Interventions, Gender & Nutrition
2017
  • Presentation to the External Review Committee – USAID External Review Introduction
  • Presentation to the External Review Committee – Field Intervention Result
  • Presentation to the External Review Committee – Household Survey Data – Analyzing nutrition, health and gender outcomes
  • Presentation to the External Review Committee – Engagement and outreach
  • Presentation to the External Review Committee – Integrated Modeling and Scaling
  • Presentation to the External Review Committee – Capacity Development
2016
  • Wetting front Detector – Helping farmers in irrigation scheduling and increasing water productivity
  • Innovation Laboratory for Small-Scale Irrigation – Update on interventions in Ghana, Tanzania, and Ethiopia – February 2016
  • Opportunities and constraints to the uptake of SSI in Ethiopia, Ghana, and Tanzania
  • Presentation on ILSSI Research Sites in Tanzania
  • Presentation on Rain-fed Fodder Production in Northern and Upper East Regions of Ghana
  • Update on IFPRI Activities in Ethiopia, Tanzania, and Ghana – February 8th, 2016
  • Feed the Future Innovation Laboratory for Small-Scale Irrigation – Overview of Interventions in Ghana
  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Page 1
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 4
  • Page 5
  • Page 6
  • Page 7
  • Page 8
  • Go to Next Page »

  • Compact with Texans
  • Privacy and Security
  • Accessibility Policy
  • State Link Policy
  • Statewide Search
  • Veterans Benefits
  • Military Families
  • Risk, Fraud & Misconduct Hotline
  • Texas Homeland Security
  • Texas Veterans Portal
  • Equal Opportunity
  • Open Records/Public Information
Texas A&M University System Member

We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website. If you continue to use this site we will assume that you are happy with it.Ok