Type | Book |
Title | Water And Poverty Linkages In Africa: Tanzania Case Study |
Author(s) | |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2015 |
URL | https://www.sei-international.org/mediamanager/documents/Publications/Water-sanitation/AfDB-Water-and-Poverty-Tanzania-FINAL.pdf |
Abstract | Water management holds the potential to address a multiple range of livelihood, poverty and development issues in Africa. There are a number of initiatives to realise this potential but, despite this, progress is slow in many areas. The African Development Bank commissioned Stockholm Environment Institute to conduct a study on waterpoverty linkages with the aim of disentangling some of the water-poverty complexities and identifying new dimensions for progressive development in Africa. The study contains three country cases, including this report from Tanzania, in which the countryspecific context of water-poverty linkages is discussed. Tanzania has a high level of water dependence in its economy, with agriculture the largest sector and main source of livelihoods for the majority of the population; other key sectors, such as tourism and fisheries (the two largest sources of foreign exchange earnings), are dependent on healthy ecosystems, whose integrity in turn depends on water flows. Agriculture is dominated by rainfed farming and livestock, both of which are severely affected by unreliable rainfall and poor water management. Safe water supply and improved sanitation coverage in both urban and rural areas is low and the rate of progress in extending coverage is below that necessary for Tanzania to attain its MDG targets. |
» | Tanzania - Population and Housing Census 2002 |