event ٢٣ يوليو ٢٠٢١

Report // Guidance on realizing real water savings with crop water productivity interventions

By Jonna van Opstal, Peter Droogers and Alexander Kaune, FutureWater, with Pasquale Steduto, and Chris Perry, Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations. This report aims to provide clear and practical guidelines on how to implement ‘real’ water savings in agriculture by selecting suitable interventions that enhance crop water productivity. A distinction is made between real water savings and ‘apparent’ water savings. This report emphasizes the paradox of water savings at field and basin scales, which usually do not translate into increased water availability for other users. It offers water savings options that can help agriculture become more productive without increasing water consumption.

FAO Guidance on real water savings

Executive summary

This technical document contains clear and practical guidelines on how to implement ‘real’ water savings in agriculture through interventions for enhancing crop water productivity. A distinction is made between real water savings and ‘apparent’ water savings. Apparent water savings record reductions in water withdrawals but do not account for changes in water consumption. Real water savings record reductions in water consumption and non-recoverable return flows (runoff or percolation). This guidance document emphasizes the paradox of water savings at field and basin scales, which usually do not translate into increased water availability for other users as is commonly believed. An intervention framework groups water savings interventions into three categories: water management; soil and land management; and agronomy.

An inventory of publications lists information on each intervention in terms of changes of the application of irrigation water, water consumption (i.e. evapotranspiration), crop yield, and water productivity. The best interventions for achieving higher water productivity mostly relate to agronomic practices. Reductions in water consumption (evapotranspiration) are achieved through selected agronomic and water management practices.

Realizing real water savings is context-specific. This guidance document provides information on the expected changes at field scale resulting from various interventions. The impact in a larger context requires analysis at district level or basin scale. The ‘follow the water’ concept introduces water accounting terms to communicate the categories of water flows in a system. ‘Water saved,’ for example, is the amount of water resulting from reducing consumption and/or the non-recoverable fraction of the return flows that can be made available for alternative uses. Following the concepts and guidelines in this document, decision-makers can improve the management of their water systems by introducing sustainable interventions to achieve real water savings.

Published

2021

By

Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations and FutureWater

Citation

Van Opstal, J., Droogers, P., Kaune, A., Steduto, P. and Perry, C. . 2021. Guidance on realizing real water savings with crop water productivity interventions. Wageningen, FAO and FutureWater. https://doi.org/10.4060/cb3844e

Download

Guidance on realizing real water savings with crop water productivity interventions

Related articles

- Tool // The Global Food and Water System (GFWS)

- Water-Food Nexus // Agriculture holds the key to tackling water scarcity

- Water-Food Nexus // Water for Food. Water for Life. A Comprehensive Assessment of Water Management in Agriculture

- News // Six key principles for improving agricultural water productivity

ابق على اطلاع!

نبلغك بالمشاريع الحالية والأحداث والإجراءات والمنشورات والأخبار!