How can African agriculture adapt to climate change: Green and Blue Water Accounting in the Limpopo and Nile Basins: Implications for Food and Agricultural Policy
Resource type
Journal Article
Authors/contributors
- Sulser, Timothy B. (Author)
- Ringler, Claudia (Author)
- Zhu, Siwa (Author)
- Bryan, Elizabeth (Author)
- Rosegrant, Mark W. (Author)
Title
How can African agriculture adapt to climate change: Green and Blue Water Accounting in the Limpopo and Nile Basins: Implications for Food and Agricultural Policy
Abstract
Water scaricity is an increasingly critical issue for food production around the world. This is particularly true for the world's poorest region, Sub-Saharan Africa, due to its growing malnutrition and almost complete dependence on rainfed agriculture. Given that agriculture is the primary consumer of freshwater around the globe and the demand for domestic, industrial, and environment water uses is steadily rising, strategies for the sustainable use of water in agriculture are urgently needed
Publication
RePEc: Research Papers in Economics
Pages
-
Date
2011-01-01
Call Number
openalex: W1520816712
Extra
openalex: W1520816712
mag: 1520816712
Citation
Sulser, T. B., Ringler, C., Zhu, S., Bryan, E., & Rosegrant, M. W. (2011). How can African agriculture adapt to climate change: Green and Blue Water Accounting in the Limpopo and Nile Basins: Implications for Food and Agricultural Policy. RePEc: Research Papers in Economics. https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:fpr:resbrf:15(18)
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