Abstract

Abstract Understanding agricultural water use by sources such as rainwater (green water) or irrigation water (blue water) is vital to manage scarce freshwater resources. Tracing sources of evapotranspiration increases water management efficiency. This study proposes a two-bucket soil moisture water balance approach to trace sources of evapotranspiration over irrigated landscapes in the Awash Basin, Ethiopia, which is modeled in the water evaluation and planning model. Algorithms are devised to separate actual evapotranspiration into blue and green sources. The results showed annual basin renewable water of 15.78 BCM in the form of streamflow (4.65 BCM), stored water (3.54 BCM), and groundwater percolation (7.59 BCM). Annual actual evapotranspiration over irrigated landscapes was 805 MCM, which was separated as blue evapotranspiration (88.4%) and green evapotranspiration (11.6%). The findings also demonstrate that blue evapotranspiration predominantly occurs during dry months, indicating heavy reliance on stored water for irrigated landscapes. Subbasin-level analyses showed varying blue/green evapotranspiration patterns based on precipitation and irrigated agriculture. Irrigation accounted for less than 3% of the streamflow in upstream basins, while midstream and downstream basins utilized up to 30 and 70%, respectively. The complementary use of rainfall and irrigation in most parts of the basin is considered to be of interest to water managers.

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