Abstract

The regular drought episodes in South Africa highlight the need to reduce drought risk by both policy and local community actions. Environmental and socioeconomic factors in South Africa's agricultural system have been affected by drought in the past, creating cascading pressures on the nation's agro-economic and water supply systems. Therefore, understanding the key drivers of all risk components through a comprehensive risk assessment must be undertaken in order to inform proactive drought risk management. This paper presents, for the first time, a national drought risk assessment for irrigated and rainfed systems, that takes into account the complex interaction between different risk components. We use modeling and remote sensing approaches and involve national experts in selecting vulnerability indicators and providing information on human and natural drivers. Our results show that all municipalities have been affected by drought in the last 30 years. The years 1981–1982, 1992, 2016 and 2018 were marked as the driest years during the study period (1981–2018) compared to the reference period (1986–2015). In general, the irrigated systems are remarkably less often affected by drought than rainfed systems; however, most farmers on irrigated land are smallholders for whom drought impacts can be significant. The drought risk of rainfed agricultural systems is exceptionally high in the north, central and west of the country, while for irrigated systems, there are more separate high-risk hotspots across the country. The vulnerability assessment identified potential entry points for disaster risk reduction at the local municipality level, such as increasing environmental awareness, reducing land degradation and increasing total dam and irrigation capacity.

Highlights

  • Drought is a recurrent feature of all climates and among the most complex, damaging, and least understood of all so-called “natural hazards” (Dai, 2013; Heim, 2002)

  • The dependency of South Africa's economy on agricultural products emphasises the importance of drought risk assessments and the identification of potential entry points for reducing its vulnerability

  • The methodology can be transferable in other regions, the hazard and exposure assessment can be reproduced in any country, the vulnerability assessment is context specific and some indicators that might be relevant for South Africa will not be for another country, we suggest to identify key indicators following the methodology applied on this paper

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Drought is a recurrent feature of all climates and among the most complex, damaging, and least understood of all so-called “natural hazards” (Dai, 2013; Heim, 2002) It is generally defined as a period of abnormally low precipitation (compared with the long-term average climate of a given region), which is long enough to severely impact the hydrological resources (IPCC, 2014). The longlasting impacts of droughts are felt in many sectors, including public water supply, energy production, tourism and agriculture, the last often being the most heavily affected sector (Dilley et al, 2005; UNDRR, 2019) This is more noticeable in countries with a large agricultural share of GDP or a large percentage of the labour force employed in agriculture, with the rural population affected (Carrão et al, 2016). It is necessary to consider climate and environmental drivers along with socioeconomic factors that determine how susceptible a community, region, system or sector is to drought and their capacity to cope

Objectives
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call