To disseminate the use of AquaCrop, five
workshops on “Capacity Development
for Farm Management Strategies to Improve
Crop-Water Productivity using AquaCrop” have
been planned as a joint initiative of
FAO and the UN-Water Decade Programme
on Capacity Development (UNW-DPC), in
collaboration with local partners.
Objective of the 5-day workshops
is to train participants from various regions
in Africa, Asia, and Middle East in
the practical applications of AquaCrop, in
order to improve their skills in strategic
management toward increasing crop water
productivity in rainfed and irrigated
production systems.
Global
demand for fresh water is constantly rising as a consequence of population
growth and the rise in living standards. Agriculture is not only the world's
largest water user in terms of volume, but is also a relatively low-value,
low efficiency, and highly subsidized user. In the years to come the agricultural
sector will compete with households and industry for increasingly scarce water
resources, and yet is under pressure to produce more food and fibre with less
water to satisfy the food needs of a growing world population. The overall
future scenario is further aggravated by the impact of climate change.
Rainfed and irrigated agriculture needs to improve its water productivity. To asses accurately crop yield under limited water availability, the crop-water
model AquaCrop can be a valuable tool. AquaCrop focuses on simulating the attainable
yield in response to water which is the key driver for agricultural production
and which becomes increasingly the critical factor limiting crop production.
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