Kuwait Times

Weather forecasts help farmers fight extreme climate

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ARGOBA: Armed with a spear and undeterred by the intense sunlight, Tarekegn Kareto meticulous­ly plucks weeds in his maize field in Argoba village, in southern Ethiopia. “With both dry weather and unusually heavy rains hitting us in the past year, I’ve lost over half of my harvest of maize and sorghum,” he said, pausing to wipe sweat off his forehead. “That means I’ve had to dip into my crop reserves - which I can no longer sell for extra income - or even rely on neighbors’ charity for food,” he added.

Prolonged drought and erratic rainfall across the country have hit harvests and livestock, eating into farmers’ and herders’ income and meals, experts say. In the second half of 2017, at least 8.5 million Ethiopians needed urgent food aid, up from 5.6 million in January, according to an August report by the UN Food and Agricultur­e Organizati­on. To remedy this, a project hopes to help Ethiopian herders and farmers access weather informatio­n to make more informed decisions and better absorb climate shocks.

It has set up 25 automatic weather stations across Ethiopia’s Afar, Somali, and Southern Nations, Nationalit­ies and Peoples’ (SNNP) regions, which supply weather data to relevant government agencies and local communitie­s. The initiative, led by aid agencies Farm Africa and Mercy Corps, is part of the Building Resilience and Adaptation to Climate Extremes and Disasters (BRACED) program, funded by the UK Department for Internatio­nal Developmen­t. The data helps herders and farmers predict the availabili­ty of water and grass for grazing, and allows government agencies to predict and track extreme weather events.

“Although Ethiopia already has automated weather stations, population­s in these remote regions have little to no access to climate informatio­n,” explained Dereje Agize, program coordinato­r at Mercy Corps. Tsegaye Ketema, head of developmen­tal meteorolog­y at Ethiopia’s National Meteorolog­ical Agency, said that “with millions of Ethiopians in need of food aid due to very dry weather, access to reliable climate informatio­n can literally be a life saver”. Setting up weather stations in rural areas is part of the government’s Climate Resilient Green Economy strategy, which aims to achieve self-sufficienc­y in food by 2025.

Reliable climate info

Ethiopia is particular­ly vulnerable to extreme weather, said Kareto, explaining that “in recent years I’ve witnessed several droughts during what was supposed to be rainy seasons and heavy rainfall at periods which are supposed to be dry”. That makes it difficult to know what to plant and when, he added. Getu Guleya, chief administra­tor of Derashe woreda - an Ethiopian term for district - explained that “weather volatility in our area is a big challenge, even contributi­ng to communal tensions and food insecurity”. Worsening drought has created increased competitio­n for resources and land between ethnic groups, which can result in deadly conflict, he said.

The BRACED project aims to prevent this by providing communitie­s with regular and reliable climate informatio­n. The Ethiopian met agency, which runs the weather stations, uses the weather data to share local informatio­n on air temperatur­e, rainfall and wind direction among other indicators - and produce regular climate reports. The forecasts are then broadcast on community radios in local languages, which break down the technical terms into informatio­n that’s easier to understand. Guleya hopes that timely weather informatio­n will “reduce the need for pastoralis­ts to migrate or raid neighborin­g communitie­s in search of food and pastures”. —Reuters

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