Solar-powered
Irrigation a Shining Success in Benin
Solar-powered irrigation systems can boost
food and income levels in rural Sub-Saharan Africa, researchers
have found.
Irrigation is known to reduce poverty in Asia, they wrote
in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences this week
(5 January), but the success of the technique is not well-documented
in Sub-Saharan Africa.
The team, from Stanford University, United States, installed
and analysed solar-powered drip irrigation systems
which use photovoltaic pumps to deliver groundwater to the
surface in arid Benin, where most farmers rely on a
36 month rainy season and irrigate by hand.
The researchers installed the solar pumps in two villages.
Compared with villages using hand irrigation, the pumps led
to more vegetables being produced and farmers earning more
money.
Vegetable intake increased by 500750 grams per person
per day equivalent to 35 servings of vegetables
during the rainy season in villages with solar systems,
and people in control villages ate 150 grams more, suggesting
that extra vegetables grown in the two villages were being
sold in local markets.
"This study thus indicates that solar-powered drip irrigation
can provide substantial economic, nutritional and environmental
benefits," wrote the authors.
Source: SciDev.Net
Date: 06 January, 2010

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