Agri Kultuur October / Oktober 2014 | Page 12

Felix Reinders ARC-Institute for Agricultural Engineering Food security is part of section 27 of the Constitutional Rights in South Africa. On these rights, the Constitution states that every citizen has the right to have access to sufficient food and water, and that “the state must by legislation and other measures, within its available resources, avail to progressive realisation of the right to sufficient food”. S     outh Africa faces the following key food security challenges to name but a few: to ensure that enough food is available to all, now and in the future; to match incomes of people to prices in order to ensure access to sufficient food for every citizen; to empower citizens to make optimal choices for nutritious and safe food; to ensure that there is adequate safety nets and food emergency management systems to provide people that are unable to meet their food needs from their own efforts and mitigate the extreme impact of natural or other disasters on people; In this regard water play an important role because water gives life and is crucial to food production and development. It waters the fields; nurtures the crops and stock; provides recreation; it support mines, industry; electricity generation and it provide life for plants and animals that make up ecosystems. The biggest share of water (70% in the world and 62% in South Africa) is used for agricultural production. Agriculture is also the key for rural development and poverty reduc- tion, although it is currently not the major source for rural livelihoods. Water use for food production must therefore be analysed as a value-adding process, with emphasis on the business and employment opportunities which are created. Poor access to reliable, safe and affordable water for food and livelihood creation poses a poverty trap for 239 million poor people in rural parts of Africa. See Figure 1. The water crisis is worsened by rapid population growth, urbanization and increased economic development. To a large extent the water crisis has more to do with managing water resources badly than with a lack of adequate resources. Therefore, there is a need to adopt a water management approach that accounts for the whole water-cycle. Through applying appropriate agricultural engineering technology in South Africa by performing engineering technology research, development, application, infrastructure implementation, transfer and the evaluation of equipment and systems for unique Sub-Saharan conditions, agricultural sustainability can be substantially