Abstract

The climatic condition in Ethiopia is semi-arid and this has implications especially for rural communities in the country that are largely dependent on surface water. In water scarce areas across four districts in the Tigray region, a survey of 595 households was carried out, and two shared dialogue workshops was held. In this study, the following issues were examined: (i) Access to water in relation to sources, distances covered, gender and time taken; (ii) Local perceptions on current (2014-2017) and future (2018-2021) access to water, and (iii) The types of water conflicts encountered and their causes. Results indicate 50.8% of the surveyed households collected water from dugout ponds and 24% from rivers. Chi-square test showed a statistical significance at the 1 and 5% level, respectively for distance covered and time taken to water sources. Although gender was not significant statistically, females (N=440) were more involved than males (N=155) in fetching water. Immediate problems arise for householders and specifically women and girls that travelled more than 2 km to collect water. Climate change was mentioned as the key driver that reduced access to water resources whereas tanks with water brought in truck by the government was reported as reason for current increase in access to water. However, future access to water was perceived as unpredictable due to the impacts of climate change. At least 40% of households reported that a member had encountered conflict while accessing water, conflict that manifested itself as verbal accusation and physical fighting. The majority of such instances of conflict resulted from water shortage, followed by pollution from livestock droppings. Project interventions that promote watershed rehabilitation through different ecosystem-based adaptation approaches should be supported locally to restore nearby degraded water sources while improving the functionality of boreholes and existing taps to ensure access and sustainability of water infrastructures. Key words: Water demand, vulnerability, dugout pond, water catchment, collaborative management, semi-arid.

Highlights

  • The Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), Target 6.4, addresses issues related to water scarcity with the aim of ensuring sufficient water for the population, the economy and the environment by increasing water-use efficiency across all sectors in the society (Vanham et al, 2018)

  • Great efforts to improve access to water during the Millennium Development Goals‟ (MDG) mandate were oriented towards attaining coverage which resulted in a claim that 91% of the population worldwide in 2015 had access to improved water sources (UN, 2015b)

  • Of the 159 million using surface water in 2015, 147 million lived in rural areas, and over half lived in sub-Saharan Africa, where 10% of the population still drinks surface water (WHO and UNICEF, 2017: 38)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), Target 6.4, addresses issues related to water scarcity with the aim of ensuring sufficient water for the population, the economy and the environment by increasing water-use efficiency across all sectors in the society (Vanham et al, 2018). The overall objective of this target is “to substantially increase water-use efficiency across all sectors and ensure sustainable withdrawals and supply of freshwater to address water scarcity and substantially reduce the number of people suffering from water scarcity by 2030” (UN, 2015a) Despite such an ambitious set of global goals, recorded progress, is slower than needed to meet these targets by 2030 (UN, 2017). Great efforts to improve access to water during the Millennium Development Goals‟ (MDG) mandate were oriented towards attaining coverage which resulted in a claim that 91% of the population worldwide in 2015 had access to improved water sources (UN, 2015b) Such achievements are commendable, it leaves us with the impression that an additional 9% coverage could have solved the world‟s water crisis. In Ethiopia, this percentage is a little higher with over 12% of Ethiopians still relying on surface water in 2015 (WHO and UNICEF, 2017: 39)

Objectives
Methods
Results
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