Solar-powered Drip Irrigation Enhances Food Security in the Sudano-Sahel
Journal ArticleAuthors
Jennifer Burney - Stanford University
Lennart Woltering
Marshall Burke - Stanford University
Rosamond L. Naylor - Stanford University
Dov Pasternak
Published by
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, January 14, 2010
Meeting the food needs of Africa's growing population over the next half-century will require technologies that significantly improve rural livelihoods at minimal environmental cost. These technologies will likely be distinct from those of the Green Revolution, which had relatively little impact in sub-Saharan Africa; consequently, few such interventions have been rigorously evaluated. This paper analyzes solar-powered drip irrigation as a strategy for enhancing food security in the rural Sudano-Sahel region of West Africa. Using a matched-pair comparison of villages in northern Benin (two treatment villages, two comparison villages), and household survey and field-level data through the first year of harvest in those villages, we find that solar-powered drip irrigation significantly augments both household income and nutritional intake, particularly during the dry season, and is cost effective compared to alternative technologies.
Parent Publications
Parent Research
Solar Market Gardens as a Tool for Rural Development
FSI Stanford, FSE Project
An Alternative Development Model: Assessing solar electrification for income generation in rural Benin
FSI Stanford, FSE Project (Completed)
Topics: Food Security | Nutrition | Renewable energy | Science and Technology | Sustainable development | Benin | Sub-Saharan Africa



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