Guideline for Integrated Watershed Management Data Collection: National Standard

Desta, G and Adimassu, Z and Yaekob, T and Taye, G and Woldearegay, K and Tibebe, D and Abera, W and Erkossa, T and Tamene, L (2025) Guideline for Integrated Watershed Management Data Collection: National Standard. Documentation. Ethiopian Institute of Agricultural Research (EIAR), Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.

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Research Program : East & Southern Africa

Additional Information

We extend our heartfelt gratitude to the Deutsche Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammenarbeit (GIZ), the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation (BMGF) through Supporting Soil Health Interventions in Ethiopia (SSHI), the Alliance of Bioversity International and CIAT, and Accelerating Impacts of CGIAR Climate Research for Africa (AICCRA). Their invaluable technical and financial support was instrumental in producing this guideline. Our sincere thanks go to the reviewers whose insightful inputs, comments, and suggestions played a vital role in shaping the content. We also acknowledge the Coalition of the Willing (CoW) and its task force for involving us in working on this important guideline and for their consistent support, encouragement, and collaboration. We would like to give special recognition to Prof. Mitiku Haile for his coordination role and motivation throughout the write-shop.

Abstract

With a population surpassing 100 million, Ethiopia is a country whose economic growth heavily depends on agriculture (CSA, 2016). The country has diverse topographical, geological, geomorphological, and hydrological conditions – creating diverse agroecological zones where the central, southeastern, and northern highlands are hilly/mountainous draining to lowlands. Because of the rapid increase in population, most of the agricultural land is occupied and limited land is left for agricultural production in the highlands, except through integrated hillside/mountain development. Smallholdings for agriculture are highly fragmented and degraded, leading to low agricultural productivity and associated water scarcity and food insecurity. The natural ecosystems (e.g., forest, shrub, grazing land/rangeland) are alarmingly converted to agricultural production even on marginal hillslopes. As a result, our perennial streams, reservoirs, and drinking water supplies are being degraded and threatened. Integrated watershed management (IWM) is a key approach to sustaining agricultural economic development and maintaining natural resources. We need to protect and restore environmental quality in our agricultural production systems, river basins, and other land uses. The government recognizes that the complex interactions of natural and human systems (continuous crop cultivation, deforestation, steep slope cultivation, unregulated water withdrawals, erosion and sedimentation, competition for land uses, non-point source pollution, etc.) coupled with unregulated/unplanned expansion of human settlements into fragile ecosystems have been creating new management problems that cannot be addressed by business-as-usual practices. Human modifications of land and water directly affect the delivery of water, sediments, and nutrients, and thus fundamentally alter terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems. Such unregulated and unplanned management is also contributing to hazards and disasters such as mass movements, flooding, extreme drought, and associated problems. Addressing all the problems that concern land, water, vegetation, and other ecosystem resources of a watershed in any way comes under watershed management strategies. The government therefore developed the Ethiopian Strategic Investment Framework (ESIF) for sustainable land management (SLM) and determined that a comprehensive watershed management process would be the most efficient means to address these problems (MoARD, 2010).

Item Type: Monograph (Documentation)
Divisions: Research Program : East & Southern Africa
CRP: UNSPECIFIED
Uncontrolled Keywords: watersheds, guidelines
Subjects: Others > Watershed Management
Others > Ethiopia
Depositing User: Mr Nagaraju T
Date Deposited: 20 Aug 2025 09:36
Last Modified: 20 Aug 2025 09:36
URI: http://oar.icrisat.org/id/eprint/13295
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