Water Implications of Foreign Direct Investment in Ethiopia’s Agricultural Sector

Ethiopia is often highlighted as a country in which a lot of foreign land acquisition is occurring. The extent to which these investments also constitute significant acquisitions of water is the subject of this paper. It is apparent that water availability is a strong driver of the recent surge of i...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Deborah Bossio, Teklu Erkossa, Yihun Dile, Matthew McCartney, Franziska Killiches, Holger Hoff
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Water Alternatives Association 2012-06-01
Series:Water Alternatives
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.water-alternatives.org/index.php/alldoc/articles/vol5/v5issue2/167-a5-2-3/file
id doaj-cbc81a6c231343c4b05498b591c64971
record_format Article
spelling doaj-cbc81a6c231343c4b05498b591c649712020-11-24T21:26:08ZengWater Alternatives AssociationWater Alternatives1965-01751965-01752012-06-0152223242Water Implications of Foreign Direct Investment in Ethiopia’s Agricultural SectorDeborah Bossio0Teklu Erkossa1Yihun Dile2Matthew McCartney3Franziska Killiches4Holger Hoff5International Center for Tropical Agriculture, Nairobi, KenyaInternational Water Management Institute, Addis Ababa, EthiopiaStockholm Environment Institute and Stockholm Resilience Center, Stockholm, SwedenInternational Water Management Institute, Addis Ababa, EthiopiaStockholm Environment Institute, Stockholm, Sweden; and Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research, Potsdam, GermanyStockholm Environment Institute, Stockholm, Sweden; and Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research, Potsdam, GermanyEthiopia is often highlighted as a country in which a lot of foreign land acquisition is occurring. The extent to which these investments also constitute significant acquisitions of water is the subject of this paper. It is apparent that water availability is a strong driver of the recent surge of investments in agricultural land globally, and in general the investments occur in countries with significant 'untapped' water resources. Ethiopia is no exception. We propose that the perception of unused and abundant water resources, as captured in dominant narratives, that drives and justifies both foreign and domestic investments, fails to reflect the more complex reality on the ground. Based on new collections of lease information and crop modelling, we estimate the potential additional water use associated with foreign investments at various scales. As a consequence of data limitations our analyses provide only crude estimates of consumptive water use and indicate a wide range of possible water consumption depending on exactly how foreign direct investment (FDI) development scenarios unfold. However, they do suggest that if all planned FDI schemes are implemented and expanded in the near future, additional water consumption is likely to be comparable with existing water use in non-FDI irrigation schemes, and a non-trivial proportion of the country’s water resources will be effectively utilised by foreign entities. Hence, additional water use as well as local water scarcity ought to be strong considerations in regulating or pricing land leases. If new investments are to increase local food and water security without compromising local and downstream water availability they should be designed to improve often very low agricultural water productivity, and to safeguard access of local populations to water.http://www.water-alternatives.org/index.php/alldoc/articles/vol5/v5issue2/167-a5-2-3/fileLease agreementsforeign direct investmentcrop water requirementsEthiopia
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Deborah Bossio
Teklu Erkossa
Yihun Dile
Matthew McCartney
Franziska Killiches
Holger Hoff
spellingShingle Deborah Bossio
Teklu Erkossa
Yihun Dile
Matthew McCartney
Franziska Killiches
Holger Hoff
Water Implications of Foreign Direct Investment in Ethiopia’s Agricultural Sector
Water Alternatives
Lease agreements
foreign direct investment
crop water requirements
Ethiopia
author_facet Deborah Bossio
Teklu Erkossa
Yihun Dile
Matthew McCartney
Franziska Killiches
Holger Hoff
author_sort Deborah Bossio
title Water Implications of Foreign Direct Investment in Ethiopia’s Agricultural Sector
title_short Water Implications of Foreign Direct Investment in Ethiopia’s Agricultural Sector
title_full Water Implications of Foreign Direct Investment in Ethiopia’s Agricultural Sector
title_fullStr Water Implications of Foreign Direct Investment in Ethiopia’s Agricultural Sector
title_full_unstemmed Water Implications of Foreign Direct Investment in Ethiopia’s Agricultural Sector
title_sort water implications of foreign direct investment in ethiopia’s agricultural sector
publisher Water Alternatives Association
series Water Alternatives
issn 1965-0175
1965-0175
publishDate 2012-06-01
description Ethiopia is often highlighted as a country in which a lot of foreign land acquisition is occurring. The extent to which these investments also constitute significant acquisitions of water is the subject of this paper. It is apparent that water availability is a strong driver of the recent surge of investments in agricultural land globally, and in general the investments occur in countries with significant 'untapped' water resources. Ethiopia is no exception. We propose that the perception of unused and abundant water resources, as captured in dominant narratives, that drives and justifies both foreign and domestic investments, fails to reflect the more complex reality on the ground. Based on new collections of lease information and crop modelling, we estimate the potential additional water use associated with foreign investments at various scales. As a consequence of data limitations our analyses provide only crude estimates of consumptive water use and indicate a wide range of possible water consumption depending on exactly how foreign direct investment (FDI) development scenarios unfold. However, they do suggest that if all planned FDI schemes are implemented and expanded in the near future, additional water consumption is likely to be comparable with existing water use in non-FDI irrigation schemes, and a non-trivial proportion of the country’s water resources will be effectively utilised by foreign entities. Hence, additional water use as well as local water scarcity ought to be strong considerations in regulating or pricing land leases. If new investments are to increase local food and water security without compromising local and downstream water availability they should be designed to improve often very low agricultural water productivity, and to safeguard access of local populations to water.
topic Lease agreements
foreign direct investment
crop water requirements
Ethiopia
url http://www.water-alternatives.org/index.php/alldoc/articles/vol5/v5issue2/167-a5-2-3/file
work_keys_str_mv AT deborahbossio waterimplicationsofforeigndirectinvestmentinethiopiasagriculturalsector
AT tekluerkossa waterimplicationsofforeigndirectinvestmentinethiopiasagriculturalsector
AT yihundile waterimplicationsofforeigndirectinvestmentinethiopiasagriculturalsector
AT matthewmccartney waterimplicationsofforeigndirectinvestmentinethiopiasagriculturalsector
AT franziskakilliches waterimplicationsofforeigndirectinvestmentinethiopiasagriculturalsector
AT holgerhoff waterimplicationsofforeigndirectinvestmentinethiopiasagriculturalsector
_version_ 1725980785588043776