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Resilient landscape restoration at Adada Kebele, Ethiopia
Project

Ethiopia water and landscape governance

Resilient landscape restoration at Adada Kebele, Ethiopia. Image by Hailu Wudineh Tsegaye.
In Ethiopia, recurrent droughts, water pollution, deforestation and land degradation are all major threats to water security in the country. Tackling these is a big and complex task, for which a coordinated approach and strong water policy and legislation is needed. This is what the Ethiopia Water and Landscape Governance (EWLG) programme seeks to achieve.
2020 - 2024 · Now inactive
Anna Tengberg, PhD
Anna Tengberg, PhD

Senior Advisor

anna.tengberg@siwi.org+46 (0)760 06 04 06

Many of Ethiopia’s water resources are experiencing quantitative and qualitative degradation due to over-abstraction and pollution driven by population increase, urbanisation, and expanding industry. Added to this, is a complex geographical context. Ethiopia is a land of hydrologic extremes with significant inter-annual and  seasonal variability, often leading to catastrophic droughts and episodic floods. The substantial lowland areas of the country, which accounts for over 60 percent of the land mass, are generally unproductive due to physical water scarcity. Even in high rainfall areas of the country, water is scarce for much of the year, due to low water-storage capacity, while floods cause havoc during the rainy season.

To address such enormous challenges, all stakeholders must come together in a coordinated response. Government institutions must be strong and have access to the relevant capacity. Historically, this has not been the case in Ethiopia, and the water management has suffered as a result. Through the Ethiopia Water and Landscape Governance programme, SIWI works with all parties to strengthen and coordinate the efforts for a better and more sustainable water governance and security in the country.

For some time, the water challenges of Ethiopia have been compounded by lacklustre policy frameworks for water resource management, as well as ineffective institutional arrangements for policy, regulation, implementation, and enforcement. The glaring examples of water resource management failures in Ethiopia include the demise of Lake Haramaya, the shrinking of Lake Abijata, the pollution of Awash River and Ziway and Hawassa Lakes; and siltation of Koka and Gilgel Gibe Dams and many other smaller micro-dams.

In response to these water security and governance issues, Ethiopia adopted the principles of Integrated Water Resources Management, but the implementation is constrained by capacity limitations and lack of coordination amongst the key government institutions and other stakeholders.

It is against this context that the Ethiopia Water and Landscape Governance programme seeks to strengthen the capacity of the federal government of Ethiopia, particularly the Ministry of Water, Irrigation and Energy, and other relevant institutions to accelerate implementation and institutionalization of Integrated Water Resources Management, to achieve sustainable water governance and water use.

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