African ministers urge water-sharing

African states cannot address climate change alone and must share water for their growing populations, reported Reuters, citing government ministers at a conference in Libya. Delegates said that under-investment, bad farm management and increasingly frequent droughts and floods have left the continent dependent on food imports.
English







African officials said that governments should continue their 2003 commitment to dedicate 10% of national budgets to boosting farm output. They also called for more modern irrigation systems and additional region-wide deals to share water stored in rivers, lakes and underground.

 

"Together we must find concrete and effective measures to address the issues of water in Africa, in a spirit of shared responsibility," said Jacques Diouf, director general of the UN Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO). New water control programmes for African farming would cost US$65 billion over the next 20 years, he added.
 

The cost of food imports jumped from US$10.5 billion in 2005 to US$49.4 billion in 2008 as world prices soared, according to the FAO. These higher prices have put strains on budgets in countries that subsidise imports to make them more affordable.

See full story